Lava spatters from an area between active Fissures 16 and 20 photographed at 8:20 a.m. on May 16. (U.S. Geological Survey via AP)

Lava spatters from an area between active Fissures 16 and 20 photographed at 8:20 a.m. on May 16. (U.S. Geological Survey via AP)

Boulders rain down around Kilauea; quakes shake region

Governor considers mass evacuations. Troops may be needed.

  • By SOPHIA YAN and AUDREY McAVOY Associated Press
  • Thursday, May 17, 2018 7:16am
  • Nation-World

Associated Press

HONOLULU — Earthquakes were damaging roads and buildings on Hawaii’s Big Island on Wednesday as ash emissions streamed from Kilauea volcano.

Dense, large rocks roughly two feet in diameter were found in a parking lot a few hundred yards away from Kilauea’s summit crater, which reflect the “most energetic explosions yet observed and could reflect the onset of steam-driven explosive activity,” said the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, which continues to monitor activity.

Scientists said earthquakes may shake loose rocks underground and open up new tunnels for lava to flow.

The strongest shaking was recorded around 8:30 a.m., measured as a 4.4-magnitude earthquake. The floor of the summit crater has also dropped about three feet, as the threat of a strong, explosive eruption at the top of the volcano loomed. The ground was deflating as the crater’s lava levels fell, causing stress faults around the crater to move, resulting in the earthquakes. More were expected.

Ash spewed from the summit at Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano, though emissions decreased from Tuesday.

There were occasional bursts of ash coming from the crater, causing ash to fall downwind to several communities, though there were only trace amounts, the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said. Ash plumes Tuesday had spouted as high as 12,000 feet into the air, scientists said.

These plumes are separate from the lava eruptions happening roughly 25 miles away from summit, where about 20 lava fissures have destroyed more than two dozen homes and forced the evacuation of about 2,000 residents.

Cracks formed on a highway near the entrance to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, the Hawaii Police Department said. Much of the park remains closed.

“We’re all safe, and I wish they’d open the park back up, but they have to keep it safe for everybody,” said Ken McGilvray, an area resident. “We live on a volcano!”

Hawaii Gov. David Ige said the state is forming a joint task force that could handle mass evacuations of the Big Island’s Puna district if lava from Kilauea volcano covers major roads and isolates the area. Troops may be needed for emergency evacuations, search and rescue, clearing debris and other duties.

On Tuesday, the volcano discharged ash because of rocks falling into the summit, U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist Mike Poland said.

“There is very little wind at the summit,” he said. “The plume, it’s not near as ashy as it was yesterday, and it’s rising more or less vertically over the summit region.”

Because of the ash, USGS scientists operated from a backup command center at the University of Hawaii at Hilo.

Poland did not have an immediate height on the plume Wednesday since scientists were not staffing the observatory at the summit. They will have to rely on remote observations, he said.

“Things seem to be progressing largely as they have been, except for a shift in wind and less ash,” Poland said.

Scientists remained on alert for more violent activity. Geologists have warned that the summit could have a separate explosive steam eruption that would hurl huge rocks and ash miles into the sky. But it’s not certain when or if that might happen.

Several fissures remained active Wednesday, producing lava spatter. Lava from one fissure that had been clearing a path toward the ocean, about 2 miles away, had not advanced in the last 24 hours.

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