Volcanic lava buries two housing tracts
on Hawaii's Big Island
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[June 07, 2018]
By Terray Sylvester
PAHOA, Hawaii (Reuters) - An ever-creeping
wall of lava from Kilauea Volcano has engulfed two entire seaside
housing tracts at the eastern tip of Hawaii's Big Island, government
scientists reported on Wednesday, an area where civil defense officials
said nearly 280 homes once stood.
The obliteration of the Kapoho Beach Lots and Vacationland subdivisions
by a river of molten rock some 10 to 15 feet (3 to 4.6 meters) tall
brings to at least 400 the number of homes and other structures consumed
by lava during the past month.
That latest toll of property losses from Kilauea's ongoing upheaval,
which entered its 35th day on Wednesday, far surpasses the 215
structures destroyed by lava during all 35 years of the volcano's last
eruption cycle, which began in 1983.
"Vacationland is gone, there's no evidence of any properties there at
all," Wendy Stovall, a vulcanologist with the U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS), told reporters on a conference call. At the adjacent Kapoho
Beach Lots to the north. "Just a few homes" are left standing, she
added.
County property tax records show a total of 279 homes existed in the two
subdivisions combined, according to David Mace, a Federal Emergency
Management Agency spokesman currently assigned to the Hawaii County
Civil Defense authority.
Several miles (km) to the west, another 130 homes have been confirmed
destroyed in and around the Leilani Estates community, where
lava-spouting fissures in the ground first opened May 3 on the volcano's
lower flank, according to civil defense officials.
Mace said property losses in the east-end developments of Kapoho Beach
Lots and Vacationland have yet to be officially documented.
The two communities, comprising a quiet vacation spot once popular for
its snorkeling and tide pools, sat at the edge of a small, shallow inlet
called Kapoho Bay. Lava pouring into the ocean there has completely
filled in the bay, extending nearly a mile (1.6 km) out from what had
been the shoreline, USGS scientists said.
Plumes of white steam and hydrochloric acid fumes, a vaporous, corrosive
mix formed from lava reacting with seawater as it enters the ocean,
could be seen rising from a distance.
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Lava destroys homes in the Kapoho area, east of Pahoa, during
ongoing eruptions of the Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii, U.S., June 5,
2018. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester
'EMOTIONAL ROLLER COASTER'
Authorities began evacuating the Kapoho area last week, with most
residents ushered to safety by early on Saturday, hours before lava
severed all road access to the region.
"I just locked my doors and walked away," said Betty Oberman, a
28-year Vacationland resident who headed the neighborhood watch
group there. "It's an emotional roller coaster."
The river of lava then spread out into a towering blob about a
half-mile (800 meters) wide as it crept through the flat, open
expanse of the subdivisions, swallowing everything in its path over
the next few days.
A handful of residents who initially stayed behind rather than heed
evacuation orders were airlifted by helicopter on Sunday.
Most of the two dozen volcanic vents have grown largely quiet over
the past week, with just one, Fissure 8, still spewing large volumes
of molten rock from the ground as of Wednesday, the USGS said. That
fissure is the origin of the lava flow that devastated Kapoho.
Lava had covered nearly 8 square miles (20.7 sq km) of landscape as
of Monday, and some 9,900 earthquakes had been recorded on the Big
Island since Kilauea rumbled back to life last month. That's nearly
10 times the monthly historic average for seismic activity on Hawaii
Island, the USGS said.
(Additional reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles;
Editing by Bill Tarrant and Michael Perry)
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