Notable events of the past few days includes, but is not limited to: >Over 200 earthquakes in the last 24 hours >Quakes are concentrated inland near the crater matching "long period volcanic earthquakes" indicating likely eruption (geo.mtu.edu/volcanoes/hazards/primer/eq.html) >lava lake has drained below the surface, pressure within the magma chamber rising >level of the magma chamber is currently unknown >steam pressure is currently building in the chamber, similar to the 1924 eruption >massive and rapid expansion of the summit vent over the past days >currently 24 fissures open, not all active >fissures 16-20 and 22 have joined >active lava flow at fissure 20, has reached ocean, HCL and glass particles now pose a major health risk. >highway 137 cut off, widespread mandatory evacuations could begin soon >Kike-owned extraction geothermal plant in area, lava flows entered property, majority of wells shutdown >current status of alert is red warning, major event imminent >first injury occurred 19th, faggot got hit in the leg with a lavabomb >intense hell rivers, eruptions & eerie blue methane flames >Scientists baffled by huge mass of great white sharks gathering in the mid-pacific between Hawaii and the west coast >@CA, Swimming probably wont help anymore.
>There’s probably a perfectly good explanation for it, and there is absolutely no reason to be alarmed, but hundreds of great white sharks are congregating in a remote spot deep in the Pacific.
>Which is fine! Yes, great white sharks are typically solitary creatures, so researchers were a bit surprised to realize just how many of them travel to the same spot halfway between Hawaii and Mexico’s Baja California. And yes, it’s true that the strange behavioral patterns the sharks exhibit once they get there—diving 1,000 feet toward the ocean floor and back up again, as often as every 10 minutes, for example—have never been previously recorded in any study of great white shark migration.
HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY STATUS REPORT U.S. Geological Survey Sunday, May 27, 2018, 6:51 AM HST (Sunday, May 27, 2018, 16:51 UTC)
KILAUEA VOLCANO (VNUM #332010) 19°25'16" N 155°17'13" W, Summit Elevation 4091 ft (1247 m) Current Volcano Alert Level: WARNING Current Aviation Color Code: RED
Zachary Brown
Kīlauea Volcano Lower East Rift Zone
Vigorous eruption of lava continues from the lower East Rift Zone fissure system in the area of Leilani Estates and Lanipuna Gardens.
Fissures 22 and 13 continue to feed lava flows extending south to the lava ocean entry. Signals recorded on stations in the LERZ indicate that the lava ocean entry remained active overnight.
Fissure 21 is feeding an 'a'ā flow that has continued to advance to the northeast on PGV property. However, the rate of advance has slowed overnight coincident with an observed decline in the vigor of fountaining at Fissure 21. Fissure 7 activity has increased overnight, producing a large spatter rampart over 100 feet tall from fountains reaching 150-200 feet. The fountains fed a perched pāhoehoe flow 20-40 feet thick, and ultimately a flow that had turned south toward the coast last night.
Large cracks were observed overnight on Kupono St. about 360 yards north of Malama St, near Fissure 9. Fissure 8 had three vents active overnight that were spattering and flaming, and have doubled in size over the past 24 hours. Fissure 6 was inactive overnight.
HVO field crews are on site tracking the fountains, lava flows, and spattering from multiple fissures as conditions allow and reporting information to Hawaii County Civil Defense. Crews are also checking on the status of ground cracks on Highway 130.
Volcanic gas emissions remain very high from the fissure eruptions. Trade winds are expected to diminish Sunday evening, which could expand the area impacted by vog.
Magma continues to be supplied to the lower East Rift Zone. Earthquake locations have not moved farther downrift in the past few days and the number of located earthquakes remains low.
Additional ground cracking and outbreaks of lava in the area of the active fissures are possible. Residents downslope of the region of fissures should heed all Hawaii County Civil Defense messages and warnings.
USGS/HVO continues to monitor the lower East Rift Zone activity 24/7 in coordination with Hawaii County Civil Defense.
Thomas Thomas
Kīlauea Volcano Summit
Ash continued to erupt intermittently from the Overlook crater at the Kīlauea summit. Observations from the ground and by UAV during the past week have documented retreat of the Overlook crater wall due to collapse of the steep enclosing walls and rim. Trade winds took the ash clouds primarily to the southwest. Trade winds are expected to diminish Sunday evening and communities around the summit area could see ashfall.
Earthquakes in the summit region continue as the summit area subsides and adjusts to the withdrawal of magma.
Additional explosive events that could produce minor amounts of ashfall downwind are possible at any time. Volcanic gas emissions at the summit remain high.
>tl;dr Intervene already. There are U.S. bases across the island. These kikes have already blown hundreds of millions, you think they will balk at poisoning America's little paradise? Shut them the fuck down.
>implying there isn't an active volcano causing a 2 mile seam of land to rip open and spew lava through developed land going on 3 straight weeks and half surrounding a power plant that actually wait for it... supplies power to people.
>notsureiftrollingorjuststupid.jpg
Julian Martinez
it's more or less the fact they built the plant literally, on fucking top, of a magma crater that is connected to the entire kilauea volcano directly under the entire kilauea section of the island.
See pic related, this is all the volcano. So you could drill anywhere, but you choose directly on top of a crater leading to the magma pit in the east rift, along the fault line and near the slump instead of just tapping into any other magma pit? hmmmmmmmm
please drop the bullshit and attempt at authority. Dipshits will either be mature enough to BEHAVE, or they will ignore your fucking post it note you stick in their handmade lunch with the crusts cut off.
>haven't heard a single other person talk about this (live in beach town) >been lurking threads; checking phone at work about updates daily >monday is memorial day; this is the weekend >mfw millions are going to be beach side when it goes this monday Sometimes I ask the latino/mezo/cazos I work with if they know how to swim. It's always a no.
>However, PGV officials have conceded they don’t know if hydrogen sulfide is the only possible hazard the community could face if lava interacts with their wells.
would houses surrounded by solidified magma increase in price or lose value? I thin ka volcano in the back yard would be some sort of fetish shit.. idk.