2018 Hawaii Volcano Sends Lava River Through Community

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  • čas přidán 25. 09. 2018
  • (Time-stamps, below)
    Hawaii's Kilauea volcano began a new eruption, on May 3, with its "plumbing" being rerouted from Pu'u O'o, down to new fissures in the East Rift Zone, specifically in Leilani Estates. This footage is from July 13.
    The flow has dramatically decreased, prompting officials to change the alert level from “warning” to “watch.” The lava event was concentrated within the East Rift Zone, in the southeast corner of the island. Aside from more intense vog, which was carried off by the trades or was stagnated upon the island, the rest of Hawaii Island, a.k.a, "The Big Island," remained unaffected, except for a negative impact upon our tourism, thanks to sensaltionalization of the Mainland news. (There were phreatic explosions at Kilauea's Halemaʻumaʻu Crater, sending plumes of ash into the air. There were also earthquakes felt, island-wide, at the event’s onset; where the rest were felt locally.)
    Please, visit the Big Island! The towns of Pahoa and Volcano, especially, are ready to welcome visitors, though all of the island is ready to embrace you with Aloha!
    Park website:
    www.nps.gov/havo/index.htm
    Jaggar Museum and Overlook is permanently closed. / 2061332423894083
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    "Before the arrival of new magma, the fissures were erupting what appeared to be lava stored away from the 1955 lava flow, making the lava more viscous in composition."
    www.bigislandvideonews.com/201...
    -----------------------------------------------
    Time-stamp 1:06 sources:
    In consideration to average discharge*, the Fissure 8 flow is the largest river in the state, now, at 6-9 MILLION cubic meters of lava per day, "which is 15-25x the eruption rate over the 35 years of Pu'u O'o!"
    Steve Brantley--of the HVO--updates the community, with this presentation, including cross-section diagram of Kilauea, Halemaʻumaʻu Crater's updated view, seismic activity, and confirmation of flow rate of Fissure 8 (at timestamp 3:50): • Scientist Describes Er...
    *see table 5.6:
    web.archive.org/…/www.haw…/da...
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    Time-stamps:
    Fissure 8 and Leilani Estates --
    0:13-3:00
    3:40-5:20
    22:38-23:34
    Nanawale Estates (dim view of Hawaiian Shores & Beaches, and HPP) -
    3:24-3:41
    10:01
    13:02
    Lava Tree State Memorial (Park) -
    3:41-4:18
    Puna Geothermal Venture -
    3:56-5:20
    Close-up of fissure (wobbly starboard perspective) -
    5:25-6:10
    Looking at the ocean entry, starboard side -
    6:11-7:19
    Former Kapoho coastline - 7:19
    New little lava island - 7:42-8:20
    Kapoho Crater, and the former Green Lake --
    8:20-8:36
    19:15
    Laze, mentioned - 8:38
    View of the coast, starboard wing side, where Ahulani Pond and more once was found --
    8:42-10:00
    View of the ocean and coast, port wing side, where much was lost…and gained --
    16:00-20:45
    Isaac Hale Park and Pohoiki Boat Ramp - 9:31
    2014-15 Pu’u O’o Flow, mentioned - 12:10
    Kapoho Flow of 1960, mentioned - 15:20
    Pahoa Town - 12:25
    -----------------------------------------------
    Music used, all from the CZcams Audio Library:
    “Drums of the Deep,” by Kevin MacLeod
    “Breathing Planet,” by Doug Maxwell

Komentáře • 3

  • @ExtantChronicles
    @ExtantChronicles  Před 5 lety

    (Didn't fit within description box.)
    Let me clarify that the intention of this video is to chronicle this event, not to sensationalize it at my affected neighbors’ expense. I mean no disrespect to anyone who suffered loss, by showing their property in this video.
    That being said, any blatantly rude comments made on this video criticizing the folks that live there, will be removed.
    Folks in Lava Zones 1 and 2 accept that they live in an area primed for this, though it makes it no less the heart-wrenching hardship when there is an event. Whether they choose to live there out of necessity or deliberateness, please, don't judge them so harshly. I've been seeing quite a few "armchair judges" sitting comfortably in the "the Peanut Gallery" spewing their harsh, ignorant criticism against those who live there, for deciding to live there.
    Offering far more initial affordability for real estate than notoriously found in other parts of the state, young mineral-rich soil and a lush landscape, more seclusion and privacy, a welcome--and often mandatory--atmosphere for off-gridding, etc: these zones invite residents for various reasons but all are painfully aware of the reality that lava is not merely likely to appear, but that it is already present, if only beneath the surface. They understand that living there often forfeits conventional access to property insurance--turning to the Hawaii Property Insurance Association or Lloyds of London as their options, if they can afford the higher rates--and that lending institutions will handle their applications differently, if at all. For whatever reason, these folks live here; they face their reality with an impressive sense of community, of perseverance, of Aloha. They seem to take it all in stride, as Madame Pele, a.k.a. "Tūtū Pele" [Grandmother Pele], takes her own. They don't need to trip on the "two cents" of others as they negotiate this event. /end of my "two cents"
    Insight into property insurance there:
    www.hawaiinewsnow.com/…/am-i-covered-for-this-homeow…
    Resources for how to help:
    www.hawaiinewsnow.com/…/heres-how-you-can-donate-to-…
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Other good video footage:
    Lava vs. a gate and a car -- czcams.com/video/Hm8LQSoi0lI/video.html
    The fissure fountains -- czcams.com/video/_HiM-sPGMgM/video.html
    The lava river moving super quickly -- czcams.com/video/NF3zLajnDNA/video.html
    The lava approaching a house, at night, footage from within -- czcams.com/video/jFA6MW0xTV0/video.html
    The river and fountains, at night -- czcams.com/video/16ZDAlPUL80/video.html
    and czcams.com/video/cJsei_DfMyA/video.html
    When the flow was growing -- czcams.com/video/5P87WynJ1y8/video.html
    Blue flames -- czcams.com/video/ALoa1F_Fk3U/video.html
    Kilauea eruption seen from Mauna Kea -- czcams.com/video/79eubMl32tA/video.html
    Lava flowing quickly into canyon -- facebook.com/ikaika.marzo/videos/1816898981695963/
    Lava Ocean Tours, Inc -- czcams.com/users/LavaOceanAdventures
    =====================================================
    Pele’s Hair: czcams.com/video/OEMyYNziXrc/video.html
    Talented young lady, singing by the fire: czcams.com/video/uCUiCs20_ow/video.html
    'Holo Mai Pele' and is performed by Palani Agosto, upclose to the flow: czcams.com/video/sC5E4BV8d0w/video.html
    The Community Ohana, working together, Pu'uhonua o Puna -- facebook.com/puuhonuaopuna/

  • @sandybeach516
    @sandybeach516 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you for posting this video. I've been watching other channels since about the end of May. You have caught the amazing construction and very sad destruction in a very different way. It has given me a totally different perspective on this disaster. I just did not grasp the enormity of the lava flow. This has had to be a very devastating event for those who lost their homes and property to lava. From what I'm learning, those whose homes are standing may not be able to move back due to damage caused by CO2. For all those who suffered loss, no words can express my sympathy for you. Thank you again for documenting this wonderful, horrible event.

    • @ExtantChronicles
      @ExtantChronicles  Před 5 lety

      Yes, indeed. You are correct; there are folks whose homes are unlivable due to the volcanic gases saturating them. Thank you for your kind words, for the video, but mainly for the folks of lower Puna.