New fissures open as 24-hour pause in Kilauea volcanic activity ends

FAN Editor

PAHOA, Hawaii It’s becoming an all too familiar sight — lava spewing hundreds of feet into the air, and just yards away from homes in the Leilani Estates neighborhood, now ravaged by the Kilauea volcano.

For six days now, residents have fled lava hotter than a thousand degrees, incinerating everything in its path. At least 35 structures have been destroyed. CBS News went to where one of the newer fissures opened up. It was venting steam, and every once in a while, you could hear an explosion.

On Tuesday, scientists said the lava lake feeding the eruptions dropped significantly, and activity has decreased at all twelve fissures, or cracks, along a 2.5-mile span. But Hawaiian county officials said two new lava fissures had opened, bringing the total number fissures to 14, and ending a 24-hour pause in volcanic activity. The Hawaii Office of Emergency Management tweeted that everyone in Lanipuna must evacuate. 

The eruptions happened around noon, and authorities said they were also tracking what might be a third fissure or a previous eruption re-activating, CBS Honolulu affiliate KGMB reports.   

The lava is a few hundred yards from Michael Clemmons’ home. He retired to the community five years ago and he says he’s not leaving.  

“This is all I own,” Clemmons said. “This is my house, i’ll stay until the last minute.”

Many people in the community live in lava zone one, a high risk area. Lava insurance doesn’t exist and homeowners’ insurance is very expensive, so some are going to be left on their own to try and rebuild.

© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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