Volcanic lava buries two housing tracts on Hawaii’s Big Island

June 7, 2018 - 9:50 AM
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Lava destroys homes in the Kapoho area, east of Pahoa, during ongoing eruptions of the Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii, U.S., June 5, 2018. (REUTERS/Terray Sylvester TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

PAHOA, Hawaii, June 6 – An ever-creeping wall of lava from Kilauea Volcano has engulfed two entire seaside housing tracts at the eastern tip of Hawaii’s Big Island, government scientists reported on Wednesday, an area where civil defense officials said nearly 280 homes once stood.

The obliteration of the Kapoho Beach Lots and Vacationland
subdivisions by a churning river of molten rock some 10 to 15
feet (3 to 4.6 meters) tall brings to at least 350 the number of homes and other structures consumed by volcanic lava during the
past month.

That latest toll of property losses from Kilauea’s ongoing
upheaval, which entered its 35th day on Wednesday, far surpasses the 215 structures destroyed by lava during all 35 years of the volcano’s last eruption cycle, which began in 1983.

“Vacationland is gone, there’s no evidence of any properties
there at all,” Wendy Stovall, a vulcanologist with the U.S.
Geological Survey (USGS), told reporters on a conference call.
At the adjacent Kapoho Beach lots to the north, “just a few
homes” are left standing, she added.

The two communities, comprising a quiet vacation spot once
popular for its snorkeling and tide pools, sat at the edge of a
small, shallow inlet called Kapoho Bay. Lava pouring into the
ocean there has completely filled in the bay, extending nearly a
mile (1.6 km) out from what had been the shoreline, USGS
scientists said.

Plumes of white steam and hydrochloric acid fumes, a vaporous, corrosive mix formed from lava reacting with seawater as it enters the ocean, could be seen rising from a distance.

‘EMOTIONAL ROLLER COASTER’

Authorities began evacuating the greater Kapoho area last week and ushered most of the last remaining residents to safety early on Saturday, hours before the lava flow severed all road access to the region.

“I just locked my doors and walked away,” said Betty Oberman, a 28-year Vacationland resident who headed the neighborhood watch organization there. “It’s an emotional roller coaster.”

The river of lava then spread out into a towering blob about a half-mile (800 meters) wide as it crept through the flat, open landscape of the subdivisions, swallowing everything in its path over the following few days.

A handful of residents who initially stayed behind rather than heed the evacuation order were airlifted by helicopter on Sunday, officials said.

Several miles (km) west of Kapoho Bay, another 80 structures, mostly homes, were destroyed weeks ago in the Leilani Estates community, where lava-spouting fissures in the ground first opened on May 3 on the volcano’s lower flank, according to civil defense officials.

Most of the two dozen volcanic vents have grown largely quiet over the past week, with just one, Fissure 8, still spewing large volumes of molten rock from the ground as of Wednesday, the USGS said. Fissure 8 is the origin of the lava flow that devastated the Kapoho area.

Lava had covered nearly 8 square miles (20.7 sq km) of landscape as of Monday, and some 9,900 earthquakes had been
recorded on the Big Island since Kilauea rumbled back to life last month. That’s nearly 10 times the monthly average historic average for seismic activity on Hawaii Island, according to the USGS.
(Additional reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Editing by Bill Tarrant)