HONOLULU — Lava from Hawaii’s erupting Kilauea volcano has destroyed more than 100 homes in a rural Big Island district.
HONOLULU — Lava from Hawaii’s erupting Kilauea volcano has destroyed more than 100 homes in a rural Big Island district.
As of Monday, lava burned down 117 homes, said Hawaii County spokeswoman Janet Snyder. On Friday, the count was at 87 homes. Officials had previously been updating the number of structures burned because it was difficult to tell from aerial surveys which were homes or other buildings. Snyder said from now on, the county will provide counts of homes destroyed.
She didn’t have an estimate for how many other homes are threatened.
Thousands in the Puna district had to evacuate after lava fissures started opening in neighborhoods a month ago. Officials had issued mandatory orders for residents of Leilani Estates and those in Kapoho Beach and Vacationland to leave by Friday afternoon or risk being trapped and unreachable by emergency crews.
Residents in the nearby areas should also be prepared to evacuate with little notice, officials said.
Helicopter footage from the U.S. Geological Survey on Monday showed lava from one fissure entering the ocean at Kapoho Bay.
Scientists said a laze plume was blowing inland from the ocean entry but dissipating quickly. Laze is formed when hot lava hits the ocean, reacts with sea water and sends hydrochloric acid and steam with fine glass particles in the air.
Officials warned the public to stay away from the plume because it can irritate skin and eyes and make it difficult to breathe.
There have been various arrests of people forcing their way through blocked areas. Police on Monday said a 62-year-old man sped through a checkpoint near an intersection where lava was approaching. He faces charges that include refusing to evacuate and reckless driving. Police said a 55-year-old man was arrested last week after he circumvented a traffic checkpoint and crashed his vehicle into a hardened lava flow.
The monthlong eruption has claimed as much as a half of a forest reserve that’s home to native birds and trees that have already been declining because of disease, state officials said.