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HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - Printable Version +- Punaweb Forum (http://punaweb.org/forum) +-- Forum: Punaweb Forums (http://punaweb.org/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Punatalk (http://punaweb.org/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=10) +--- Thread: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u (/showthread.php?tid=21089) |
HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - Pilgrim - 08-01-2019 Today HVO confirmed the existence of a new pond of water in the bottom of Halema'uma'u Crater. The link is a post from HVO's Facebook page in which Don Swanson describes today's overflight confirming that the small pond is indeed water. It was originally described as "about the size of a pickup truck" and it appears to be slowly growing. Swanson added quote: https://www.facebook.com/hawaiivolcanoesnps/posts/2720905367936782?hc_location=ufi RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - Pilgrim - 08-03-2019 Here's an interesting read with more details from Don Swanson. I think it's intriguing that although water has never been recorded in the bottom of the summit caldera there are references to ponds of water appearing before explosive eruptions in Hawaiian chants. Water in Hawaii volcano could trigger explosive eruptions: https://www.apnews.com/403f1d69f8f041b492ed687e7644075f RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - Seeb - 08-03-2019 Is there and mapping for pyroclastic flows RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - terracore - 08-03-2019 "Swanson said that while researchers have never observed water on the caldera floor before, there are Native Hawaiian chants that describe the presence of ponds appearing just before explosive events...Swanson said big explosive eruptions commonly produce pyroclastic surges — walls of hot air, ash and rock. In 1790 one such eruption killed a large number of people at Kilauea’s caldera, Swanson said...Swanson said none of this will happen overnight, and he hopes that modern monitoring techniques will give the public plenty of warning. “I’ve been stressing that the current activity at Kilauea, or lack thereof, can go either way,” Swanson said. “We can either return to what was going on before, or this could be the preamble to some more significant change in the volcano that leads to explosive activity." ETA: Or a third way (nothing happens). RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - Pilgrim - 08-03-2019 Now that's a third way I can really get behind. RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - kalakoa - 08-03-2019 Missing the important parts: is it sacred, and who does it belong to? RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - Pilgrim - 08-04-2019 And now there are two ponds. One about 36' in diameter and another about 20-23' diameter. https://volcanoes.usgs.gov/volcanoes/kilauea/multimedia_chronology.html RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - Punatic007 - 08-04-2019 I don't get it, Kilauea is considered at low risk now correct? Then why does a water lake possibly precede an explosive eruption? https://www.apnews.com/403f1d69f8f041b492ed687e7644075f RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - TomK - 08-04-2019 A water lake might indicate the level of groundwater underneath Kilauea, or it may not. Worst case is that hot magma is now heating water and there will be an explosion, the best case is that these are just large puddles that can't drain due to impervious rock. Given there are no indications right now that magma is heating water underground then HVO is saying a Kilauea eruption is a low risk. That might change if they see signs of things changing. RE: HVO confirms water in Halema'uma'u - kalakoa - 08-05-2019 That might change if they see signs of things changing. So it's just like getting permits. |