La fisura 8 del volcán Kilauea, en la Isla Grande de Hawái, continua arrojando chorros de lava incandescente.
Técnicamente conocidas como «cortinas de fuego», estos borbotones de magma ardiendo alcanzaron alturas de hasta 61 metros. El volcán Kilauea entró en erupción el 3 de mayo, y todavía no hay indicios de cuándo podría terminar de expulsar lava.
#LeilaniEstatesEruption #KilaueaVolcano LATEST: USGS reports lava from fissure 8 is ~2.8 miles above Four Corners moving in pauses & surges up to 600 yds/hour; Lava from fissure 18 within 0.65 miles of Hwy137 & moving ~100 yds/hour https://t.co/QVK3HAmVYU @HawaiiNewsNow #HINews pic.twitter.com/PFs4jEbEqQ
— Mileka Lincoln (@MilekaLincoln) May 30, 2018
Fissure 8 fountaining feeds a lava flow moving downslope along Highway 132; moves 600 yards/hour. Lava advancing along a steepest descent path that could take the flow to the Four Corners area. #LERZ https://t.co/IPaEB0GnJA pic.twitter.com/LUuBz7V7JH
— USGS Volcanoes? (@USGSVolcanoes) May 30, 2018
#LeilaniEstatesEruption #KilaueaVolcano UPDATE: USGS released this map of the current extent of lava activity across the lower East Rift Zone including the flow front locations from fissure 8 (~3 miles from Four Corners) & fissure 13 https://t.co/rFRfcFLqyq @HawaiiNewsNow #HINews pic.twitter.com/FLnAAqAAv1
— Mileka Lincoln (@MilekaLincoln) May 30, 2018
#Hawái #Kilauea #LeilaniEstatesEruption
Mayo 30, 2018AVISO:
Se ordenan más evacuaciones por avance de flujos de lava en Pahoa Hawái. Se restringe el paso de autos desde Four Corners hasta Hawaiian Beaches
Vía @MilekaLincoln pic.twitter.com/oB9GxmP2ig— Geól. Sergio Almazán (@chematierra) May 30, 2018