close
close
Season 1 of the ongoing Kīlauea Summit Eruption A Wrap with Episode 12 Finale: Big Island Now

Visitors see lava fountain during the 12s of the ongoing summit of the Kīlauea volcano in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park from the Keanakāko’i overlooked on March 4, 2025.

This is a wrap, people.

If in the last 2 months and about 10 days of the outbreak within Halemaʻum’u crater in Kaluapele, the summit of Caldera des Kīlauea volcano on the Big Island, season 1 of an average television series or an anime with the final of episode 12 in episode 12.

The Hawaiian volcanic observatory reports that the latest eruptive activity in the north and south ventilation openings in the crater began at 7:30 p.m. on March 4 with sporadic, slow, intermittent lava flows and increased continuous flows at 12:45 p.m.

Lava fountain shot again melted rocks up into the air, with the dance lasting overnight, much to the delight of everyone who personally see the spectacle or could see it on the summit livestream.

The article is continued under the display
The article is continued under the display

Just like at the best season finale, the exciting, roaring eruptive organizer ended too early at 10:37 a.m., 5 less than 22 hours after the start of continuous activity.

At the same time, however, the summit button quickly changed from deflation – after Summit -Filtmeter recorded about 11 microradier of deflation in episode 12 – to inflation and decrease in seismic tremor intensity, possibly a teaser for a new season.

Click on the picture above to show an animation of pictures from a 24-hour period of the summit outbreak within Halema’uma’u crater of Kīlauea. The camera is located on the southern edge of the crater and the view is in the west (US Geological Survey S2Cam).

The well again reached heights of 600 feet, which were maintained until the outbreak of northern ventilation at 8:26 p.m. on March 4.

The continued fountain from the South Vent was seen all night over heights of 200 to 400 feet before taking out on the morning of March 5.

The article is continued under the display

The fountain climbed from South ventilation at 8 a.m. on March 5, and the north ventilation briefly took on the fungial and outbreak of lava flows from 8:42 a.m. to 9:11 a.m.

Lava flows from episode 12 in episode 12 more than two thirds of the Halema’uma’u crater soil in the southern part of the Kīlauea Caldera, which is located in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.

The dangers continue to include volcanic mate, especially sulfur dioxide, which react in the atmosphere, to vog or volcanic mug, against the wind from the summit, and Peles hair, wind-blown volcanic las that can influence the national park and the nearby communities.

Visitors are on the edge of Kaluapele, the summit of Caldera des Kīlauea volcano, in Hawaii Vulcanoes National Park on March 4, 2025 behind the Volcano House, to see Episode 12 of the ongoing summit outbreak of Kīlauea in the distance. (Photo with friendly approval: National Park Service/Hawaii Vulcanoes National Park Facebook page/Photo by Janice Wei)

The sulfur dioxide emission rates were an average of around 35,000 tons a day on March 4 on March 4, but had decreased to around 20,000 tons a day on the morning of March 5.

The article is continued under the display

The emission rates during the break period are estimated at around 1,000 tones a day, similar to other breaks in this persistent outbreak, which began on December 23, 2024.

Each folk state took just a little less than 13 hours to JSut for more than 8 days and was separated by breaks from less than 24 hours to 12 days.

No changes were found in the Vulkan -Eeate Rift Zone or the Southwest Rift Zone.

Kīlaua’s volcanic alarm and aviation color code stay with Watch or Orange.

The Hawaiian Vulcano Observatory continues to monitor Kīlauea and will issue an eruption update on the morning of March 6, unless there are previously significant changes.

(Tagstotranslate) 200 to 400 FEET (T) Big Island News (T) Big Island Now (T) Fountains of 600 FEET (T) Hawaii Volcanoes National Park (T) Hawaiian Volcano Obervatory

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *