'Go now', Hawaii residents warned as
eruptions spread
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[May 07, 2018]
By Terray Sylvester
PAHOA, Hawaii (Reuters) - Emergency
authorities battling lava flows and gas erupting from Hawaii's Kilauea
volcano told some residents to "Go now" as a new fissure opened and more
structures were destroyed.
Kilauea has destroyed 26 homes and forced 1,700 people to leave their
residences since it erupted on Thursday, spewing lava and toxic gas from
volcanic vents in a small area of Hawaii's Big Island.
A new fissure opened on Sunday night in the Leilani Estates area some 12
miles from the volcano, prompting a cellphone alert for residents to
leave homes to avoid sulfur dioxide gas, which can be life threatening
at high levels.
So far no fatalities or major injuries have been reported from the
volcano, according to the Hawaii County Civil Defense Agency.
Evacuees from Leilani Estates were allowed to return for pets,
medications and to check property on Sunday, but some like Jeremy Wilson
found homes surrounded by fissures that can be hundreds of feet long.
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"My house is right in the middle," said Wilson, who turned back in his
car when he saw steam coming from cracks in the road ahead.
The semi-rural wooded area of Leilani Estates had become a magnet for
newcomers to Hawaii's Big Island who were prepared to risk living near
to an active volcano in return for more affordable real-estate prices.
Eruptions of lava and gas were expected to continue, along with
aftershocks from Friday's 6.9 magnitude earthquake, the largest in the
area since 1975, according to the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory. A lava
flow advanced 0.6 of a mile from one of the vents.
Geologists said the activity looked like an event in 1955 when eruptions
continued for 88 days in the area and covered around 4,000 acres with
lava.
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Carolyn McNamara, 70, talks with her neighbour, Paul Campbell, 68,
at an evacuation center in Pahoa after moving out of their homes in
Leilani Estates after the Kilauea Volcano erupted on Thursday after
a series of earthquakes over the last couple of days, in Hawaii,
U.S., May 4, 2018. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester
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Jessica Gauthier, 47, said she and other local realtors had seen
vacation renters cancel their reservations, even though the volcanic
activity is confined to a relatively isolated area far from tourist
centers.
"There’s no way to know that if you’re sitting in your living room
in Ohio and watching the national news," she said.
Gauthier predicted business would pick up as a new kind of visitor
began to appear.
"Within a month we’ll start getting lava tourists," she said of
people who come to Hawaii to see its active volcanoes.
Hawaii County authorities requested lava watchers keep away.
"This is not the time for sightseeing. You can help tremendously by
staying out of the area," the civil defense agency said in a
statement.
(Reporting by Terray Sylvester; Writing by Andrew Hay in New Mexico;
Editing by Hugh Lawson and Toby Chopra)
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