USGS Warns Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano Erupting In “Full Swing”
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) confirmed that Hawaii’s Kīlauea volcano began erupting Wednesday after a swarm of earthquakes.
Kīlauea is one of the most active volcanos on Earth and “was once a cooling lava lake is now a new fissure eruption,” USGS Volcanoes tweeted.
Before..and..After! #Kilauea #volcano summit #eruption is in full swing. What was once a cooling lava lake is now a new fissure eruption! https://t.co/ZIxSFKk70V
Follow along with updates at the #HawaiianVolcanoObservatory website. #HVO https://t.co/KGKIwXB2A8#KilaueaErupts pic.twitter.com/jCqTFsJRMS
— USGS Volcanoes🌋 (@USGSVolcanoes) September 30, 2021
USGS detected the eruption around 1520 local time at Kīlauea’s summit crater. The agency raised the volcano’s alert system “WATCH” to “WARNING” and its aviation color code from “ORANGE” to “RED” by evening.
#Fissures of #lava and falling of #tephra!
A line of low lava fountains is erupting from the crater floor, tephra is falling downwind, and a new fissure opened up on the west wall of Halemaʻumaʻu crater. https://t.co/jDxUTFInn4 #KilaueaErupts pic.twitter.com/ONcGrmutua— USGS Volcanoes🌋 (@USGSVolcanoes) September 30, 2021
“All signs indicate that it will stay within the crater,” Ken Hon, the top USGS volcanologists at Hawaii Volcano Observatory, told ABC. “We’re not seeing any indications that lava is moving into the lower part of the east rift zone where people live. Currently, all the activity is within the park.”
According to the USGS website, the latest alert level suggests an eruption is “imminent, underway or suspected,” according to the USGS website.
The Sun has set on the new eruption within Halemaʻumaʻu crater at Kīlauea’s summit. We’ll be back in the early morning with more posts here, but in the meantime, new images and other info will be posted throughout the night at https://t.co/Lm77CMQ2Tc. #KilaueaErupts #kilauea pic.twitter.com/olCDWes1F7
— USGS Volcanoes🌋 (@USGSVolcanoes) September 30, 2021
Kīlauea’s most recent eruption was around December of last year. Residents in the area were asked to remain indoors to avoid toxic gasses and ash clouds. A few years before that, in 2018, another eruption was more powerful and destroyed hundreds of homes and forced many residents to evacuate.
Volcanologists still don’t know if magma has filled reservoirs within Kīlauea, which would repressurize the volcano and result in a much larger eruption.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 09/30/2021 – 09:06
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3AVppBa Tyler Durden