Hawaii helicopter evacuation readied as
new lava stream hits ocean
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[May 25, 2018]
By Marco Garcia
PAHALA, Hawaii (Reuters) - A third lava
flow from Hawaii's erupting Kilauea volcano streamed into the ocean on
Thursday as U.S. Marine Corps helicopters stood by to evacuate a Big
Island community should molten rock or huge cracks block its final
escape route.
Six huge fissures sent rivers of molten rock through a blackened,
volcanic wilderness that was once jungle, farmland and rural homes.
Kilauea, one of the world's most active volcanoes, entered the fourth
week of what may be an unprecedented, simultaneous eruption at its
summit crater and along a six-mile (9.7-km) string of fissures 25 miles
(40 km) down its east flank.
At about 6 p.m. local time on Thursday, the volcano erupted at its
summit, sending ash 10,000 feet (3000 m) into the air. The wind may
carry ash to the southwest toward the Pahala area, the Hawaiian Volcano
Observatory said.
At least 50 rural homes and other structures have been destroyed by lava
from fissures in a small area of the Big Island. Some 2,000 people have
faced mandatory evacuations and another 2,000 in coastal communities may
be forced to leave their homes if State Highway 130, their last exit,
becomes blocked.
The U.S. Marine Corps deployed two CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters to
Hilo, about 24 miles north (39 miles), in support of a task force
standing by in case an air evacuation is needed. Each helicopter can
carry up to 50 people at a time.
"We now have the capacity to evacuate all of the estimated population of
lower Puna south of the lava flow within a few hours," Brigadier General
Kenneth Hara of the Hawaii National Guard said in a statement.
Road crews dumped material into cracks on the road and covered them with
steel plates in an effort to keep the highway open.
"Talks and discussions have been underway for possible air evacuations
if it did come to that," Tim Sakahara, Hawaii Department of
Transportation, told reporters in a conference call.
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A spectator aboard a tour boat takes photos of the lava hitting the
ocean during the eruption of the Kilauea Volcano near Pahoa, Hawaii,
U.S., May 24, 2018. REUTERS/Marco Garcia
Up at Kilauea's 4,091-foot (1,246-meter) summit, at least 12
explosions a day on average are pumping ash plumes thousands of feet
(meters) into the sky. Ash drifted up to 26 miles (42 km)southwest
to dust the black sands of Punaluu beach with gray powder before
blowing out to sea.
Down on the east flank of the volcano, six fissures re-erupted in
lava fountains, as volcanic activity moved west towards Highway 130.
Geologists said that after three weeks of escalating activity,
Kilauea volcano has entered a "steady state" of eruption.
"It's probably going to do this for a little while longer," said
U.S. Geological Survey scientist Wendy Stovall on the conference
call, describing the stage of the eruption as the "middle" or "kind
of the steady state."
While a roughly 10-square-mile (26-sq-km) area of the Puna district
has been ravaged, authorities stressed the eruption was having
limited effects on the Connecticut-sized island that is a major
tourist destination.
Norwegian Cruise Line said it would reinstate port calls to the
island's two largest cities, Kona and Hilo, after cancelling them in
recent weeks. Crystal Symphony cruises also said it planned to
return to the two ports after cancelling a Wednesday Hilo stop due
to "an abundance of caution."
(Additional reporting by Jolyn Rosa in Honolulu and Marco Garcia in
Pahala, Hawaii; Writing and additional reporting by Andrew Hay;
Editing by Bill Tarrant and Sandra Maler)
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