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Photos are Public domain. Thanks to U.S. Department of
Interior, U.S. Geological Survey.

Incandescent hole formed on November 30, 2004 in MLK vent,
part of theAerial view looking east across Pu`u `O`o. Kona wind
blows thick gas plume north from main crater. West Gap pit
also is choked with gas just west of main crater. Red is active rock slide
at headwall of Puka Nui, a large, complex collapse area
in central part of image. The individual pits have not been named, except for
Lua Hou, the tiny pit giving off narrow gas plume near right
edge of photo. Note the concentric cracks around the larger collapse features.
Lava flows in this area cover older spatter and cinder from
Pu`u `O`o, which is unstable and slowly spreading, developing pits in the
overlying flows. Yellowish slope in middle of photo is part of
Pu`u `O`o's cone that is falling apart. cluster of vents in the MLK-June
25-Puka Nui complex at south base of Pu`u `O`o.

A house is torched by a lava flow in Kalapana. In May 1990, a
Federal Disaster Declaration was issued for Kalapana and all other
areas previously affected by the eruption.

Geophysicists make measurements across the roof of a lava tube
leading from the episode 51 vents. The measurements reveal the size
of the tube and the cross-sectional area of the lava stream.
Together with measurements of the speed of the lava stream, these data
allow us to estimate lava discharge from the volcano.

Lava bubbles explode from two openings in the roof of the lava
tube system on the Kamokuna lava bench. The openings are located
10-25 m inland from the edge of the bench. The largest bubbles
tossed fragments as high as 40 m and flung ribbons of spatter several
meters long that landed intact on the bench. The bursts were
accompanied by loud, chugging noises as the lava exploded from the tube.
During the activity, a steam jet (lower right) produced a
vigorous white steam plume.
These explosions occur when seawater flashes to steam within
the confined space of an active lava tube.
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