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Kaʻū News Briefs Aug. 8, 2024

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Still time to cast ballots, register to vote, online, in person
PRIMARY ELECTION BALLOTS CAN BE DROPPED OFF AT NĀ'ĀLEHU POLICE STATION
24/7 UNTIL 7 P.M. AUG. 10, which is Election Day. Nāʻālehu Police Station is at 95-5355 Māmalahoa Hwy 11. The ballot drop box is outside the police staton. See voter guides in English, 'Ōlelo Hawaiian, Ilokano, Tagalog and Chinese at https://elections.hawaii.gov/.../2024-primary-election.../

Roberts Hawai'i is under special contract
 to provide additional school buses until
Ground Transport can find enough drivers.
School bus service resumes Monday
.
PUBLIC SCHOOL BUS SERVICE WILL BE RESTORED IN KAʻŪ ON MONDAY. The state Department of Education announced on Thursday that 14 routes from Kaʻū into Hilo will restart, following no school buses the first week of school, due to a driver shortage.     
    The two public schools here that are dependent on the public school buses are Nāʻālehu Elementary and Pāhala High & Elementary.
     Restoration of service was made through the state and current contractor, Ground Transport, Inc. bringing in Roberts Hawai'i bus company as an emergency contractor for the next two weeks. According to Gov. Josh Green, the service will continue until Ground Transport can hire enough drivers to do it on their own.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see facebook.com/kaucalendar. See upcoming events, print edition and archive at kaunews.com. Support this news service with advertising at kaunews.com. 7,500 copies in the mail and on stands.

REMEMBERING THE LAKE IN HALEMA'UMA'U is the subject of this week's Volcano Watch, written by U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates:
    Remember when a little puddle of green water was spotted in Halemaʻumaʻu? Time flies, because that was late July 2019—over five years ago! And because we've had multiple eruptions and intrusions since
then, the water lake sometimes feels forgotten in the larger history of Kīlauea.
    Now that we've reached the five-year anniversary of that puddle of water showing up, we thought we'd take the opportunity to remind you about the lake and fill you in on what we learned over the course of its nearly 1.5-year existence. Monitoring and understanding the lake was important because the presence of water increased the possibility of violent phreatic (steam-driven) explosions once Kīlauea erupted again, as there have been such eruptions in Kīlauea's past. During the lake's lifetime, the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) kept a close eye on the color, level, and temperature of the lake; at other volcanoes, phenomena like a sudden color change or boiling can be precursors to eruptions.
    The water level measurements made by HVO staff revealed that the lake rose steadily and was not affected by rainfall, which meant that it was fed by groundwater. Measurements made by thermal camera also showed that the water was so warm (up to about 80°C, or 175°F) that at least half the groundwater flowing into the lake evaporated away rather than remaining in the lake itself.
    The lake was inaccessible on foot, and using a helicopter to sample the water was deemed too hazardous. Instead, after careful planning and discussions with Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, HVO obtained water samples from the lake using uncrewed aircraft system (UAS, or drones)—first on October 26, 2019, and for a second time on January 17, 2020.
    Travel and fieldwork restrictions in 2020 due to COVID-19 prevented sampling again as quickly and as often as we would have liked, but eventually, a third sampling was conducted on the 1-year anniversary of the first sample, October 26, 2020. Interestingly, the chemical composition of the lake changed very little in the year between the first and third sampling campaigns.
    The lake water was acidic (pH of approximately 4), but not as acidic as most acid volcanic lakes around the world (pH of about 1), and it contained large amounts of dissolved iron, magnesium, and sulfur.
    We determined that the iron and magnesium were leached from Kīlauea's basaltic rocks. The iron also was responsible for the lake's many colors. The initial greenish color was due to the form of iron that exists in Kīlauea basalts. As that iron in the water spent more and more time in the lake and in contact with oxygen in the atmosphere, it transformed to another form of iron that creates orange- and brown-colored minerals, similar to rust that forms on metal objects. That explains why the lake changed color from green to brown over time; the green water that frequently reappeared at the lake's edges was another line of evidence that told us the lake was consistently being fed by groundwater with the green form of iron.
    Initially, HVO thought that any sulfur in the water might be the result of the lake dissolving sulfur gases, like sulfur dioxide (SO2), being released from magma below—a process called 'scrubbing.' However, careful study of the type of sulfur in the water, along with the acidic-but-not-very-acidic pH mentioned above, revealed that the lake's sulfur was instead derived from sulfate alteration minerals—deposited on the nearby rocks for years and years—that had dissolved into the water.
Ultimately, the lake didn't show any changes before the December 2020 eruption and, luckily, lava erupted adjacent to the lake rather than through it, so no large phreatic explosions materialized. Instead, in just over an hour, all the water accumulated over the past year and a half was boiled away by lava flows!
    Halemaʻumaʻu has since been largely filled by lava, and groundwater in the Kīlauea summit is significantly deeper than the current crater floor, well beneath the surface. So, though another water lake is not out of the question in Kīlauea's future, we're not expecting one any time soon. If we do get one though, we'll have a better understanding of it right away, based on our measurements of the 2019–2020 lake.
A) Top left, photo of Halemaʻumaʻu before the 2018 collapse events started with the decade-long active lava lake that formed in 2008. B) Top right, photoafter the 2018 collapse events had dropped the crater floor of Halemaʻumaʻu by more than 1,600 ft  (500m) over the course of just 4 months. C) Bottom left, in July 2019 a water lake started to form in the newly deepened Halemaʻumaʻu, and this lake continued to grow over the next year and a half. D) Bottom right, the eruption in Dec. 2020 boiled away the water lake in a single night and continued until May 2021 before another eruption started in Sept. 2021, continuing to the present. All photos from U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory 

    
Volcano Activity Updates
    Kīlauea is not erupting. Its USGS Volcano Alert level is ADVISORY.
    Seismic activity and ground deformation continues at Kīlauea's summit and upper-to-middle East Rift Zone following the July 22-25 intrusive event. Over the past week, about 525 earthquakes were detected beneath Kīlauea's upper East Rift Zone and about 125 events were detected between Maunaulu and Puʻuʻōʻō in the middle portion of the East Rift Zone within Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park. Kīlauea's summit and middle East Rift Zone show slow inflation over the past week. Unrest may continue to wax and wane with changes to the input of magma in these areas; changes can occur quickly, as can the potential for eruption.
    Mauna Loa is not erupting. Its USGS Volcano Alert Level is at NORMAL.
    Three earthquakes were reported felt in the Hawaiian Islands during the past week: a M4.0 earthquake 13 km (8 mi) NNE of Hawaiian Ocean View at 7 km (4 mi) depth on August 6 at 2:00 a.m. HST, a M3.4 earthquake 6 km (3 mi) S of Volcano at 1 km (1 mi) depth on August 4 at 2:35 p.m. HST, and a M3.8 earthquake 6 km (3 mi) S of Volcano at 1 km (1 mi) depth on August 2 at 11:49 p.m. HST.
HVO continues to closely monitor Kīlauea and Mauna Loa.
    Email questions to askHVO@usgs.gov.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see facebook.com/kaucalendar. See upcoming events, print edition and archive at kaunews.com. Support this news service with advertising at kaunews.com. 7,500 copies in the mail and on stands.






The Reunion features the screening of a PBS film Ka'u Sugar,
A Town Remembers 
on the history of the sugar plantation
 and the closing of the mill in 1996. It will also feature a film 
on history of the local coffee industry.


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