Call & Times

Hawaii braces for upheaval as erupting Kilauea boils

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PAHOA, Hawaii (AP) — Hundreds of anxious residents on the Big Island of Hawaii hunkered down Saturday for what could be weeks or months of upheaval as the dangers from an erupting Kilauea volcano continued to grow.

Lava spurted from volcanic vents, toxic gas filled the air and strong earthquake­s — including a magnitude 6.9 temblor on Friday — rocked an already jittery population. The trifecta of natural threats forced the evacuation of more than 1,700 people from communitie­s near the lava and prompted the closure of parks, college campuses and a section of the main road through the area on the Big Island’s southern tip.

Five structures have burned and thousands of customers briefly lost power from one of the larger quakes.

Tesha “Mirah” Montoya, 45, said toxic fumes escaping from the lava vents weren’t enough to make her family evacuate, but the tipping point were the earthquake­s.

“I felt like the whole side of our hill was going to explode,” she said. “The earthquake was what made us start running and start throwing guinea pigs and bunnies in the car.”

Montoya, her husband and daughter don’t know how long they will be away from the three-story octagonal house they built nearly 20 years ago from a patch of “raw jungle.”

“My heart and soul’s there,” she said in a phone interview from a cabin on the north side of the Big Island, where the family had hunkered down. “I’m nothing without the land. It’s part of my being.”

Tina Neal, the scientist in charge of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Hawaiian Volcano Observator­y, warned distressed residents at a community meeting late Friday that eruptions could last longer than the ones from earlier this week, and earthquake­s and aftershock­s could continue for days, even weeks.

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