The Manila Times

Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano erupts

- Geological Survey / Kevan Kamibayash­i

LOS ANGELES: The US state of Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano erupted on Thursday (Friday in Manila), causing lava to spew

- nor signed an emergency proclamati­on releasing disaster funds to the Big Island in the eruption’s wake.

Local news footage showed streams of lava snaking through a forest and The Hawaii County Civil Defense Agency reported “steam and lava emissions from a crack in Leilani Subdivisio­n in the area of Mohala Street” following the blast.

Residents of that impacted area, some 1,700 people, were under mandatory evacuation after the burst from Kilauea, one of the most active volcanoes in the world.

In addition to the obligatory evacuation­s, many areas fell under voluntary evacuation zones, affecting some 10,000 people, according

US Geological Survey authoritie­s of the Hawaiian Volcano Observator­y unit were both on the ground and headed into the air to assess the eruption, which followed some 100 small earthquake­s in recent days and began around 4:45 p.m. local time (0245 GMT Friday), according to the agency.

Earlier, at 10:30 a.m., a larger 5.0-magnitude earthquake south of the Puu Oo volcano cone triggered rockfalls and potential collapse into a crater on the volcano, according to USGS.

Big Island resident Janice Wei told Agence France- Presse she felt “a big shake underneath my feet” and then said immediatel­y after she saw a giant pink plume of smoke.

“We’ve been waiting for big movement from the crater, after so many small earthquake­s,” she told Agence France-Presse.

Using his drone, area resident Jeremiah Osuna captured video footage of the red- hot lava flow, describing it as a “curtain of fire.”

“It sounded like if you were to put a bunch of rocks into a dryer and turn it on as high as you could,” he told Honolulu television station KOHN.

Following the eruption authoritie­s warned of subsequent “lava

- ditional earthquake­s.

The agency said those downwind of the dissipatin­g plume “may experience a dusting of ash,” warning of “potentiall­y lethal concentrat­ions of sulfur dioxide gas” in the zone as well as methane blasts that could propel large rocks and debris in adjacent areas.

‘New ground cracks’

Governor David Ige activated the archipelag­o state’s National Guard troops, and told residents to pay heed to warnings from the Civil Defense Agency.

“Please be alert and prepare now to keep your family safe,” Ige wrote on Twitter.

Local community centers were open to residents impacted by the threat, Hawaii’s emergency management agency said.

The USGS had raised the volcano alert in the area from a watch to a warning, reporting that “new ground cracks” were discovered in the late afternoon.

“White, hot vapor and blue fume emanated from an area of cracking in the eastern part of the subdivisio­n,” the agency wrote, saying spatters began just before 5:00 pm.

It emphasized that the early

- namic,” and “additional vents and new lava outbreaks may occur.”

“At this time it is not possible to say where new vents” could happen, it said.

The affected area is part of the Big Island’s East Rift Zone, in which the Hawaii Volcano Ob- In this photo provided by the US Geological Survey, an ash plume rises above the Kilauea volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island on Thursday (Friday in Manila). movement” and warned residents that seismic activities and eruptions could take place without notice.

“All areas bordering East Rift Zone at high risk for eruption,” Hawaii County’s mayor Harry Kim said on Twitter.

US Senator Brian Schatz of Hawaii said The Federal Emergency Management Agency ( FEMA) was mobilizing resources, as well as monitoring for forest fires, power outages and water supply issues.

Hawaii Island, or the Big Island, is the largest of the eight main islands that comprise the

that includes hundreds of smaller volcanic islands.

Wei, who moved to Hawaii from California—known for its high earthquake risk—said the eruption was almost a “relief.”

“People live here—the Hawaiians and local people have lived here forever,” she said. “You know what’s going on; we have warning systems.”

“Everybody should be prepared.”

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