Pahao - A rising tide of lava
turned a Hawaii street into a smoking volcanic wasteland on
Friday, destroying at least eight homes as residents stood on
the road and watched their houses burn.
The destructive fury of the erupting Kilauea volcano has
been unleashed on the Big Island's Leilani Estates housing
development, with the number of homes and other structures
destroyed jumping to 82 from a previous count of 50 only a few
days ago, according to David Mace, a spokesman for the Federal
Emergency Management Agency.
Some 15,000 acres (6,070 hectares) of land - about half the
size of Florida's Disney World resort - have been torched by
lava since May 3, in what is likely to be the most destructive
eruption of Kilauea in over a century, according to the County
of Hawaii.
"There were eight houses taken on this road in 12 hours,"
said Ikaika Marzo in a Facebook video as he stood on Kaupuli
street and showed a black, glass-like lava field where his
cousin's house previously stood.
Where there were once houses and tropical back gardens in
Leilani Estates, magma spews from 100-foot-high (30-metre-high)
cinder cones and forms elevated ponds of molten rock that
cascade over their banks to engulf the next street.
"It's this tide of lava that rises up and overflows itself
on the edges and keeps rising and progressing forward," said
US Geological Survey geologist Wendy Stovall told journalists
on a conference call.
Around 37 structures are "lava locked," meaning homes are
inaccessible, and people who do not evacuate them may be hemmed
in by 30-foot-high (9-metre-high) walls of lava.
Magma is draining underground from a sinking lava lake at
Kilauea's 4,091-foot (1,247-metre) summit before flowing around
25 miles (40km) east and bursting from giant cracks, with two
flows reaching the ocean just over three miles (4.83km)
distant.
Stovall declined to comment on lava volume being emitted.
Marzo said he was told by a USGS geologist there was much more
to come from Kilauea.
"What has been coming out is just a small fraction of what
was in the volcano," he said he was told.
Though lava destruction from the volcano is confined to a
roughly 10-square-mile (26-sq-km) area, the eruption is hurting
the island's tourist-driven economy as potential visitors fear
ashfall or volcanic smog belching from Kilauea's summit.
A 4.4 magnitude earthquake at the volcano's summit on Friday
prompted County of Hawaii Civil Defense to reassure the island's
200,000 residents that there was no risk of a tsunami.
Year-to date 2018 visitor numbers to the Connecticut-sized
island are "trending a little bit lower" than 2017, with the
cancellation of some port visits by cruise ships expected to
have a $3 million impact, said Ross Birch, head of the island's
tourism board on a conference call.