Toxic gas alert for Hawaii volcano
eruption; new areas at risk
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[May 11, 2018]
By Terray Sylvester
PAHOA, Hawaii (Reuters) - Residents on the
Big Island of Hawaii were alerted on Thursday to rising levels of toxic
gas from lava-oozing fissures, and geologists warned that new areas east
of the erupting Kilauea volcano may be at risk of molten rock bursting
from the ground.
Hawaii County authorities sent a text message to residents of the
southeast corner of the island warning them of a wind change that would
bring rising levels of sulfur dioxide gas, which can be fatal if inhaled
in large quantities.
"It’s just horrible. You can’t breathe in there," said evacuated
resident Robynn Stagg, 58, who drove through the thick, orange sulfur
dioxide haze earlier this week in a failed attempt to check on her home.
Hawaii's governor has warned that mass evacuations may be required as
more fissures open in the ground and spew lava and gas into semi-rural
residential areas on the east flank of Kilauea, one of the world's most
active volcanoes.
During an evening meeting with community members, an official with the
United States Geological Survey's Hawaii Volcano Observatory said that
while no new fissures have opened during the last 24 hours, there has
been "quite a bit" of ground cracking over the last day and that they
were releasing steam.
"Because the lava intrusion is still active and earthquakes are still
occurring, we still think there’s a decent chance of new eruptive
activity at the surface," Steven Brantley said.
Authorities on Thursday completed the removal of highly flammable
chemicals from a nearby geothermal power plant that was in the path of
creeping lava.
The latest upheaval at Kilauea began last week after the crater floor of
a long-active side vent collapsed suddenly in a cloud of ash, triggering
a similar plunge in the molten lake inside the larger crater at the
volcano's summit.
What followed was a flurry of earthquakes as huge volumes of magma --
the term for lava beneath the surface -- drained back through
deep-underground passages that carried the molten rock far downslope.
The lava then forced its way back to the surface through large cracks,
or fissures, that opened at ground level in a residential area miles
(km) away.
(GRAPHIC: Scorched earth - https://tmsnrt.rs/2IldVyS)
'BALLISTIC BLOCKS'
Geologists said Kilauea may be entering a new phase of explosive
eruptions not seen in nearly a century that could hurl "ballistic
blocks" weighing up to 12 tons for half a mile (800 meters), and rain
pebble-sized fragments for another mile or two (1.8 to 3.2 km).
However, the immediate vicinity around the summit, an area controlled by
the National Park Service, was to be closed to visitors indefinitely,
starting on Thursday night.
Such blasts would likely also eject plumes of volcanic ash that could be
carried farther downwind into neighboring communities, creating a
nuisance and potential respiratory irritant, but not a life-threatening
hazard, officials said.
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Lava advances towards a metal barrier in Puna, May 6, 2018.
WXCHASING via REUTERS
The Leilani Estates community remains in greatest danger, with 15
volcanic fissures so far having destroyed 36 structures, most of
them homes, and forcing the evacuation of about 2,000 residents.
But as the eruption progresses, "other areas of the lower East Rift
Zone may also be at risk," the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said in
a bulletin.
"There is the potential for additional outbreaks," Christina Neal,
the chief scientist at the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano
Observatory at Kilauea told a news briefing. "There are other
communities, other residential neighborhoods that could, depending
on the evolution of activity, be in harm's way."
Hawaii Governor David Ige has requested federal disaster assistance
as he said a mass evacuation of the lower Puna District, where
Leilani Estates is located, would be beyond current county and state
capabilities.
Hawaii police said they arrested Alexandru Stingu-Dragomir, 29, on
suspicion he burgled four houses in Leilani Estates after the mayor
declared an emergency the area on last week.
SURFING IN THE VOG
Local meteorologists said the change in prevailing winds could send
Kilauea's volcanic smog, or vog, northwest to Maui and other islands
in Hawaii.
Surfers bobbing in the ocean off Kona on the west side of the Big
Island complained of the smog that could be seen in a haze over the
coast.
"Does that hat protect against vog?" one surfer was heard quipping
to another about the floppy sun hat he was wearing.
In Pahoa, the nearest village to Kilauea, some schools remained
closed after the area was hit by a 6.9 magnitude earthquake on
Friday, the biggest since 1975.
The closures have added to a sense of disarray and ramped up stress
levels, said gallery owner Amedeo Markoff, 49.
"It's like our version of a snow day -- a lava day," joked Markoff.
(Reporting by Terray Sylvester and Jolyn Rosa; Writing and
additional reporting by Andrew Hay in New Mexico; Editing by Bill
Tarrant and Sandra Maler)
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