Property losses mount on Hawaii's Big
Island as lava flow spreads
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[June 05, 2018]
By Terray Sylvester
PAHOA, Hawaii (Reuters) - A river of lava
spewing from the foot of Hawaii's Kilauea Volcano swallowed about three
dozen more homes on the Big Island during a weekend of destruction that
brought to nearly 120 the number of dwellings devoured since last month,
officials said on Monday.
Mounting property losses were reported a day after five or six people
who initially chose to stay in the newly evacuated Kapoho area after
road access was cut off were rescued by helicopter, according to the
Hawaii County Civil Defense agency.
All but a few of the estimated 500 inhabitants of Kapoho and adjacent
Vacationland development are now believed to have fled their homes, an
agency spokesman said. The area lies near the site of a seaside village
buried in lava from a 1960 eruption.
The latest damage came from a large lava flow that crept several miles
(km) before severing a key highway junction at Kapoho on Saturday and
then obliterating about a half dozen blocks of the subdivision over the
weekend, the spokesman said.
One finger of the lava poured into a small freshwater lake, boiling away
all its water late on Saturday, while another finger spilled into Kapoho
Bay on Sunday night, officials said.
On Monday, civil defense reported a total of 117 homes and other
structures destroyed across the island's larger lava-stricken region, as
the eruption from Kilauea, one of the world's most active volcanoes,
continued through its 33rd day.
About three dozen of those structures, mostly private homes and vacation
rentals, were lost during the weekend in Kapoho. The rest were consumed
weeks earlier in the larger Leilani Estates subdivision several miles
(km) to the west, where lava-spouting fissures in the ground first
opened on May 3.
About 2,000 residents have been displaced from Leilani since earlier
this month as fountains of lava and high concentrations of toxic sulfur
dioxide gas continued unabated. A mandatory evacuation of much the
subdivision was imposed last week.
Plumes of volcanic ash belched into the air by periodic daily explosions
from the crater at Kilauea's summit have posed an additional nuisance
and a health concern to nearby communities.
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Lava destroys a house as it flows into the Pacific Ocean in the
Kapoho area, east of Pahoa, during ongoing eruptions of the Kilauea
Volcano in Hawaii, U.S., June 4, 2018. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester
So too have airborne volcanic glass fibers, called "Pele's hair,"
wispy strands carried aloft by the wind from lava fountains and
named for the volcano goddess of Hawaiian myth.
Seaside residents and boaters also have been warned to avoid noxious
clouds of laze -- a term combining the words "lava" and "haze" --
formed when lava reacts with seawater to form a mix of acid fumes,
steam and glass-like specks.
Lava flows have knocked out telephone and power lines, causing
widespread communication outages, and forced the shutdown of a
geothermal energy plant that normally provides about a quarter of
the island's electricity.
At the same time, most of the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, one of
the island's biggest tourist attractions, remains closed
indefinitely due to hazards from ash and volcanic rock ejected from
the summit crater, and accompanying earthquakes that have damaged
park facilities.
Kilauea's current upheaval comes on the heels of an eruption cycle
that began in 1983 and had continued nearly nonstop for 35 years,
destroying more than 200 homes. Scientists say they are unsure
whether the latest activity is part of the same eruption phase or a
new one, and how long it may last.
(Additional reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles;
Editing by Sandra Maler)
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