Hawai'i Volcano Blog

Volcano Watch: Small but Notable Magma Intrusion at Kīlauea’s Summit

The 2018 lower East Rift Zone eruption and summit caldera collapse marked the end of the 35-year-long Puʻu ʻŌʻō and 10-year-long summit lava lake eruptions, and the beginning of a new chapter in Kīlauea Volcano activity.

Volcano Watch: Recent Activity Reminds Us to Maintain our Volcano Awareness

Residents should be aware of Hawaiʻi’s active volcanoes.

HVNP Announces 6 Free Days of Admission in 2021

The entrance fee waiver for the fee-free days does not cover camping or backcountry overnight permit fees.

County Releases Kīlauea Recovery Plan

In total, 31 projects are identified, which come with their own action steps and an implementation structure that fosters collaboration.

Volcano Watch: When Rocks Fly

Tephra is the Greek word for ash, and it is the label we use for rocks that come flying out of the volcano during an eruption.

Kīlauea Eruption Triggered by Decade-Long Pressure Build-Up, Study Shows

The 2018 eruption of Kīlauea was triggered by a decade-long build-up of pressure in the upper parts of the volcano.

Volcano Watch: Remembering The Thanksgiving Eve Breakout From 2007

Although the TEB flow was much less destructive than the 2018 LERZ eruption, it nevertheless threatened homes in lower Puna for months.

How Has Topography Been Modeled at Hawai‘i’s Volcanoes?

In cartography and geographic analyses related to volcanoes, especially in Hawai‘i, there is perhaps nothing more important than having an accurate digital model of topography.

Volcano Watch: Using Hawaiian Eruptions to Understand volcanism in N. California

Some regions monitored by the volcano observatories had geologically ‘young’ eruptions that are nonetheless old enough to lack written documentation, eyewitnesses, or first-hand accounts.

Volcano Watch: Innovative Monitoring of Kīlauea’s Summit Water Lake

The water surface is a mosaic in constant motion, a scene that changes by the minute and hour. 

Volcano Watch: Seismic Swarms and Sulfur Smells, What is Happening at Kīlauea Volcano?

Between seismic swarms leading to sleepless nights, and sulfur smells leading to wrinkled noses, it has been a somewhat interesting week for Hawai‘i Island residents.

Volcano Watch: Charcoal Provides Understanding to Processes in Young Volcanic Terranes

One of the fundamental premises of geology is that the “key to understanding the future is to understand the past.”

Volcano Watch: Crack Team of Geologists Measure the Koa‘e Fault System

The Koa‘e fault system connects Kīlauea’s East and Southwest Rift Zones south of the caldera.

Volcano Watch: Join Statewide Earthquake Preparedness Drill on Oct. 15

Major earthquakes cannot be predicted.

Volcano Watch: What Do Earthquake Measurements Mean?

By 1930, Hawai‘i had earthquake report cards that were distributed to the community by HVO staff for people to write detailed information about what they observed during earthquakes.

Volcano Watch: HVO’s New Website is More Accessible and Mobile-Friendly

An exciting and major improvement on the new HVO website is that it’s more mobile-friendly.

Volcano Watch: HVO Camera Network Reconfiguration and Upgrades Coming Soon

Over the past two decades, the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) has set up a camera network system to monitor visual changes at Kīlauea and Mauna Loa volcanoes.

Volcano Watch: On the Surface of Kīlauea’s New Landscape, a Story is Told

In the past, Halema‘uma‘u crater was described as being transformed into a pit of “tumbled masses of rock blocks” after drainage or collapse of Kīlauea summit.

Magma Plumbing Keeps Working Underneath Kīlauea’s New Landscape

Last week, Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park was able to open the Kīlauea Overlook to the public for the first time since the lower East Rift Zone eruption and summit collapse in 2018.

Volcano Watch: Geodesy Through Time, A History of Measuring The Shape of Hawaiian Volcanoes

Geodesy is the science of accurately measuring and understanding the Earth’s geometric shape, gravity field, and orientation in space — and how these change through time.
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