Lava threatens Hawaii exit routes, could
spur more evacuations
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[May 15, 2018]
By Terray Sylvester
PAHOA, Hawaii (Reuters) - Lava flowing from
giant rips in the earth on the flank of Hawaii's erupting Kilauea
volcano threatened highways on Monday, raising the possibility officials
may order thousands more people to evacuate before escape routes are cut
off.
Lava from a huge new fissure tore through farmland towards a coastal
dirt road that is one of the last exit routes for some 2,000 residents
in the southeast area of Hawaii's Big Island.
More lava-belching cracks are expected to open among homes and
countryside some 25 miles (40 km) east of Kilauea's smoking summit,
possibly blocking one of the last exit routes, Highway 132.
Fountains of magma spouted "lava bombs" more than 100 feet (30 meters)
into the air as the molten rock traveled east-southeast towards the
coastal road - Highway 137 - the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said.
Mass evacuations would be triggered if either highway is hit by lava,
said Hawaii National Guard spokesman Jeff Hickman.
"There's a lot of worst-case scenarios and roads getting blocked is one
of them," said Hickman, standing on Highway 137, in the potential path
of the lava flow, some two miles (3 km) away.
ERUPTIONS COULD LAST WEEKS
Dozens of homes have been destroyed since eruptions began 10 days ago
and officials have ordered the evacuations of nearly 2,000 residents in
the lower Puna district of the Big Island, home to around 187,000
people.
The American Red Cross said 500 people sought refuge in its shelters on
Sunday night because of worsening volcanic activity.
Two more fissures opened in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 19.
"It's optimistic to think that this is the last fissure we're going to
see," said Hawaiian Volcano Observatory Deputy Scientist-In-Charge Steve
Brantley. A similar seismic event in 1955 lasted 88 days, he said.
Unnerved by near-constant small earthquakes and emissions of toxic
sulfur dioxide gas, Rob Guzman and his husband Bob Kirk left their home
in Kalapana Seaview Estates while they still could.
"We just need the local government to calm down the panic that some of
these 2,000 people are feeling, that today, we're going to be trapped
with no way out," said Guzman, who left behind a banana farm and rental
properties to go stay with friends.
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Cracks on the road are seen marked with an orange spray in efforts
to track changes through time, on Hwy 132 in Hawaii, U.S. May 13,
2018. Picture taken on May 13, 2018. USGS/Handout via REUTERS
The Hawaii Fire Department issued a "condition red" alert on Monday
because fissures in the southeast area of the Lanipuna Gardens area
were issuing high levels of sulfur dioxide.
"Condition RED means immediate danger to health so take action to
limit further exposure. Severe conditions may exist such as choking
and inability to breathe," the department said in the alert.
While residents deal with noxious gas and lava on the ground, the
U.S. Geological Survey is concerned that pent-up steam could cause a
violent explosive eruption at the volcano crater, launching a
20,000-foot (6,100-meter) plume that could spread debris over 12
miles (19 km).
Scientists had expected such explosions by the middle of this month
as Kilauea's lava lake fell below the water table. The possibility
exists, however, that water may not be entering the crater, as
feared, and gas and steam may be safely venting, scientists said.
"So far those explosions have not occurred and I think the key here
is that the vent system is an open one, therefore pressure is not
being built or developed down at the top of the lava column,"
Brantley told a conference call.
(Graphic - Scorched earth: https://tmsnrt.rs/2jIJ5lG)
(Reporting by Terray Sylvester in Pahoa and Jolyn Rosa in Honolulu;
Additional reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Writing by Andrew Hay
in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Bill Tarrant, Sandra Maler and Paul
Tait)
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