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Report on Kilauea (United States) — June 1991


Kilauea

Bulletin of the Global Volcanism Network, vol. 16, no. 6 (June 1991)
Managing Editor: Lindsay McClelland.

Kilauea (United States) E rift lava continues to enter the ocean

Please cite this report as:

Global Volcanism Program, 1991. Report on Kilauea (United States) (McClelland, L., ed.). Bulletin of the Global Volcanism Network, 16:6. Smithsonian Institution. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.GVP.BGVN199106-332010



Kilauea

United States

19.421°N, 155.287°W; summit elev. 1222 m

All times are local (unless otherwise noted)


Lava . . . continued to flow into the ocean at two main entries through June. The W branch fed two active sites (at the Poupou entry). At the E Poupou site, lava continued to build the E edge of the lower bench, although its W edge had been eroded by waves. "Firehose"-like outflow of lava from truncated tubes occurred periodically at the E Poupou site, as on 7 June when the activity fed a tube in the surf zone. Frequent underwater explosions occurred along the tube, sometimes sending spatter several meters into the air. Firehose activity typically ended with the construction of a new lower lava bench. At the W Poupou site, parts of the 3-m-high littoral cone and the underlying sea cliff were eroding. A fissure developed just inland of the littoral cone in late May and additional large fissures appeared within a few meters of the sea cliff on 25 June.

Lava broke out from the main tube in mid-May and formed a new (E branch) tube, reaching the sea (at the Paradise entry) late in the month. Lava initially entered the ocean along a front 300-400 m wide, but within a few days the entry narrowed to <20 m across. The resulting bench sloped steeply and smoothly into the ocean, with none of the step-like changes in relief evident at the Poupou entry. Lava continued to pour into the ocean from the bench until the last week in June, when a large flow broke out and moved W across the beach behind the bench. The new entry was <500 m E of a 1988-89 bench where major collapses occurred after it extended no more than 45 m into the ocean. Only one significant collapse episode, which removed ~15 m of the new bench, had been noted at Paradise as of early July.

No changes were observed near the source (Kupaianaha) vent. Lava in a tube near the vent was flowing at ~0.9 m/s . . . on 20 June. A small lava lake persisted in the older Pu`u `O`o vent . . . . Overflows from the lava lake covered the crater floor, ~80 m below the rim. Some spattering was observed, concentrated in the S part of the lake.

Geological Summary. Kilauea overlaps the E flank of the massive Mauna Loa shield volcano in the island of Hawaii. Eruptions are prominent in Polynesian legends; written documentation since 1820 records frequent summit and flank lava flow eruptions interspersed with periods of long-term lava lake activity at Halemaumau crater in the summit caldera until 1924. The 3 x 5 km caldera was formed in several stages about 1,500 years ago and during the 18th century; eruptions have also originated from the lengthy East and Southwest rift zones, which extend to the ocean in both directions. About 90% of the surface of the basaltic shield volcano is formed of lava flows less than about 1,100 years old; 70% of the surface is younger than 600 years. The long-term eruption from the East rift zone between 1983 and 2018 produced lava flows covering more than 100 km2, destroyed hundreds of houses, and added new coastline.

Information Contacts: T. Moulds, HVO.