Yes, it is such a amazing sight to see! We know it is destructive. I don’t think anyone wishes bad things on people who have lost their homes. We just can’t help but be memorized by the power and change of the landscape. Part of Hawaii is gaining attitude! We and watching an island expand. Just be safe everyone from the various dangers! You have stories to share from now to - 70 years! Take care!
Thank you for this great video. Appreciated hearing the Leilani resident input as well as Maj. Hickman's update of the conditions there. Wanted to add this is the best view I've seen of the lava lake. Really looks like a lake here and fluid.
Will G, your statements are ridiculous and show clearly that you truly do not understand the culture we have here. What you don't understand, shut your trap about. Go read a book and learn something!
sorry but it was a matter of time. not only is that whole island a volcano, those homes are smack on top of an active fissure array. i would chance it though because i am a pyro at heart and i understand a very fundamental truth: to create is to destroy, you can not have one without the other. i would not build on an active spot like that, i am crazy but not stupid, for the most part.
I feel so terrible for the people who have lost their homes, but holy crap is it awesome to see this eruption! The island of Hawaii continues to build itself!
Wholy cow, look at that lava move, so fast and not even time lapsed... That's freaking crazy. I hope everyone gets the hell out and I hope they have shelter in place to put the people who are affected.
I have a question how did this volcano erupted..side .ways.. long ways what... i missed that part on the new.. s im always on TH-cam watching this volcano .. mountain...grow... in to the waters... i think... im from Winnipeg Canada... i watch.. the news alot..
The volcano is full of cracks. Basically, lava in the summit tube drained out into a line of cracks running all down the east side. That's what's coming out in this video.
Kilauea volcano has two rift zone extending southeast and southwest of the volcano's summit. RIft zones are areas of weakness that serve as conduits for magma. Most of the volcano's recent eruptions, like the 2018 event, have taken place on the southeast rift zone. Unfortunately, several residential subdivisions were built in the southeast rift zone in the 1960s-1970s despite recent eruptions in 1955 and 1960-1961. Most of the homes damaged in 2018 were in these subdivisions. And it's a given that future eruptions will take place in this part of Hawai'i Island.
On another video somebody asked same question. Response was that before this started HI has been having record high rainfall. So right now everything just soaked in water.
The Wandering Alatross, you're probably correct on that. We don't have sinkholes here in Hawaii, so I haven't seen it, but given human nature, it figures.
+Silent Lucidity ASMR "this wicked flesh" girl stop tripping - this "wicked flesh" is our gift to experience - not all are wicked - just chill and enjoy life while you can
that's pretty much what that PGV geothermal plant did on top of the last flow right in that area in the 1950's. I wonder if they'll be as keen to try that again on top of this new flow once it solidifies.
The wells are still there and the power plant infrastructure is, so far, untouched. As far as the operators of PGV are concerned, the plant is going to be reopened eventually(unless it's buried in cooling, solid rock before then that is).
Why not at water to the lava my thinking it’s fire and what about use road to stop the lava from spreading if it’s stopped and can’t go anywhere then the lava will burn itself out?
If the wall on the lava lake were to break out, imagine trying to out run a good reservoir of lava moving at about 9 miles an hour. >>>>>please just try to be careful, to the residents, God will restore what you've lost.
9 mile an hour, how about 15 to 30 miles an hour! The lava is still liquid and it's all down hill from there! Your talking millions of cubic feet of liquid lava rushing down the hillside!
The old guy👺 with the ponytail was going to say "back to the shelter" but said 'senior center' instead. Everybody thinks he was going to say shit hole or something.😹
John and Jake, I'm fairly certain that Sky hit this one on the head. Only select people are allowed that close to the lava, and those are not the type who just *have* to have their silly looking head in a shot of lava. News people are allowed, and escorted at particular times, to get news for their respective agencies.
To think this is what our planet must have looked like when it was being formed. I suppose is not even close to our sun. Our prayers go out to every person affected in Hawaii:(
Why are so many people able to buy into that so easily...??? You realize the rarity of an event like that?? Rare even in the context of a geologic timeline. It’s happened, sure. Is it happening now? No.
Elizabet h best hope that dam doesn't burst over that road as you will find yourselfs running for your lives. The lava trickles slowly in small amounts. But when you have a 50ft deep lake of super heated lava it will come at you as tsunami of Molton doom! You won't escape and you will perish
truthseekers, the town now rests at the bottom of a lava lake, look it up, it's on all the videos, the power plant has been overtaken by fifty feet of lava. It's the truth, I thought you were into the truth per your avatar.
ryvr madduck typical shithead. Show respect and compassion for people who lost their homes, meanwhile US gov doing shit. You will end like that soon enough, to know, what shit person you are
How silly! Volcanoes are an indispensable part of this planet's ecology. Without them, we would have no weather patterns, nor could new land be created.
Yellowstone national park is famous for its hot springs, geysers, and picturesque vistas. However, it’s the supervolcano lurking under Yellowstone that we have to thank for all of that. An eruption in Yellowstone could be a global cataclysm, but NASA has a plan to reduce the risk while also generating power. The plan is not without risks, and the price tag is high. Still, if it keeps us from being wiped out by clouds of hot ash, it might be something to consider. Yellowstone hasn’t erupted in about 630,000 years, and there’s no way to predict when it will happen again. It could be tomorrow, or it could take another million years. The point is, it will happen. Well, it will if someone can’t come up with a way to stop it. The NASA plan involves drilling into the caldera from sites outside of Yellowstone to gain access to the magma pocket that powers the supervolcano. That’s the dangerous part - a full eruption of Yellowstone wouldn’t kill that many people, but it would create a 500-mile wide ashfall with areas of the West and Midwest receiving up to four inches of ash. Total sunlight reaching croplands would be substantially (though temporarily) reduced. Assuming you can drill deep enough to open a channel to the supervolcano, you could use it to generate geothermal power. NASA’s plan calls for water to be piped through the volcano, which would emerge super-heated to about 662 degrees Fahrenheit (350 degrees Celsius). The steam could be used to generate power, but that energy doesn’t just appear from nowhere. It’s coming from the supervolcano, which would cool over time and lower the risk of eruption. Setting up this system would probably cost on the order of $3.5 billion, according to NASA estimates. The Yellowstone Caldera: Deceptively picturesque. NASA’s is considering this ambitious plan because of the extreme threat a supervolcano like Yellowstone presents. The Yellowstone Caldera has erupted three times in the past, and each of them has been orders of magnitude larger than the volcanic eruptions with which we’re familiar. There have been three eruptions in Yellowstone, the first of which occurred about 2.1 million years ago. It spread ash across much of North America and left a 50-mile wide crater in Yellowstone, which is now known as the Island Park Caldera. Supervolcanoes like Yellowstone can pump many cubic miles of ash into the atmosphere, which could alter global climate for a decade or more. These types of eruptions are extremely rare, but the Lava Creek eruption rated a VEI (Volcano Explosivity Index) score of 8, and covered a huge swath of the United States. LavaCreekTuff The Lava Creek eruption was 640,000 years ago with an ejection volume of 1,000 cubic kilometers. Image by Wikipedia To put this in further perspective: The eruption of Krakatoa, which destroyed an entire island, is ranked as a VEI 6 event. The most powerful eruption in the past 200 years was Mt. Tambora in 1815. This eruption kicked off what’s known as the Year Without a Summer, in which famine and wild temperature fluctuations occurred worldwide - and Tambora threw “just” 120 cubic kilometers of material. A Yellowstone eruption of comparable size to those we know happened 640 - 2.1 million years ago could be nearly 10x worse. The more recent Yellowstone eruptions haven’t been quite as large as the first, but any eruption in Yellowstone has the potential to cause widespread destruction. Working on ways to mitigate the danger is a good idea, even if it’s expensive. It would probably take many years to know whether NASA’s plan was just slowing the buildup of pressure or actually reversing it, and in the best case scenario, it would take thousands of years to cool the caldera completely. However, that’s thousands of years Yellowstone could power a large chunk of the US. You Might Also LikePowered By ZergNet This is How 'The Flash' Can Fix DC's Movie Woes Characters Killed Off Because of the Actor's Ridiculous Behavior Bloopers That Cost the Filmmakers a Ton of Money The Disturbing Truth About 'Dating Naked' The Truth About 'Duck Dynasty' Star Sadie Robertson Why Hollywood Won't Cast Wesley Snipes Anymore Tagged In science nasa geology volcanoes supervolcano Yellowstone Post a Comment 98 Comments This site may earn affiliate commissions from the links on this page. Terms of use. ExtremeTech Newsletter Subscribe Today to get the latest ExtremeTech news delivered right to your inbox. This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletter at any time. More Articles tizen Samsung May Use Wear OS Instead of Tizen on Upcoming Smartwatches May 23 Kyocera Vibe ET Deals: Free Phone and Mobile Service at FreedomPop with $9.99 Activation May 23 hiv Scientists Use CRISPR to Block HIV Replication Inside Living Cells May 23 Inside the ATLAS detector Scientists Plan New Project to Search for Particles that Escape from LHC May 23 Elon Musk: Model 3 Braking Can Be Fixed in Firmware. What? May 23
From where they are standing it's over half a mile to the lava fountains. Maybe looks small on camera but sure as hell wouldnt look small if you would go closer. 50 tops my ass.
i wouldn’t bet on being able to continue to live there, like building a house at the bottom of an avalanche chute or below sea level near the beach , price you pay for paradise I guess, kind of like global warming threading homes in key west
I would like to see the whole island covered in molton lava...after all the island is made up of multiple live volcano's so it is only logical the island would be covered.
Better get the hell out of there people! Is gonna get worst, say goodbye to the beautiful island of Hawaii, because all that is gonna get sunk into the sea!!! Don't say how it happened or why because we all know why is this and other disasters happening around the world!!
Jes C, "we all know... " really ? Are you suggesting that thus is a result of man-made climate change ? Or, did you have another, prehaps even an unscientific theory ?
Nor Dic We human beings are causing all this, so we are paying the consequences of our actions. And no don't say god is doing this because that's not even on the list of the cause.
But it will look like the garden of eden in a few years when everything settles down and all the plants regrow. You can't have creation without destruction. That's how nature works, dude. 😊👍
I swear that older gentleman was gonna say shit hole lol
ViperDemon6819 Wright I thought the same thing 😆
Yes he did
ViperDemon6819 Wright haha right !
Same lol 😂
ViperDemon6819 Wright aww i feel bad for him in that shit hole
Thanks for all the updates
Yes, it is such a amazing sight to see! We know it is destructive. I don’t think anyone wishes bad things on people who have lost their homes. We just can’t help but be memorized by the power and change of the landscape. Part of Hawaii is gaining attitude! We and watching an island expand. Just be safe everyone from the various dangers! You have stories to share from now to - 70 years! Take care!
Thank you for this great video. Appreciated hearing the Leilani resident input as well as Maj. Hickman's update of the conditions there. Wanted to add this is the best view I've seen of the lava lake. Really looks like a lake here and fluid.
It is beautiful but extremely sad for those who have lost or will lose their homes.
Look at me! Look at me! I built my house on a volcano! Isn't it wonderful? Oh, wait.......
Rev, please crawl back into the hole you call home. That is a mean comment.
Will G, your statements are ridiculous and show clearly that you truly do not understand the culture we have here. What you don't understand, shut your trap about. Go read a book and learn something!
sorry but it was a matter of time. not only is that whole island a volcano, those homes are smack on top of an active fissure array. i would chance it though because i am a pyro at heart and i understand a very fundamental truth: to create is to destroy, you can not have one without the other. i would not build on an active spot like that, i am crazy but not stupid, for the most part.
Wow, amazing to see the scale of it with people standing in front.
These people should consider themselves lucky to witness such an awe inspiring spectacle of nature.
Shane, spot on. I am jealous I'm not there to see it. The noise must be incredible.
looks like mother nature just hit the Reset button 🚨
I feel so terrible for the people who have lost their homes, but holy crap is it awesome to see this eruption! The island of Hawaii continues to build itself!
Hello yes insurance company i live on an active volcano am I covered for volcano damage ... hello ? Hello ? U still there ?
Random Dude posting 😂😂😂😂. How u said that. Lol.
Where is that soldier’s cover?
Beautiful to look at, lovely to behold. But if it would stop, we could all go home.
some people never left
Which begs the question: WHY?
....oh look a lava dome.
Excellent video! Thanks!
BIVN you're doing a great job, thank you
Wholy cow, look at that lava move, so fast and not even time lapsed... That's freaking crazy. I hope everyone gets the hell out and I hope they have shelter in place to put the people who are affected.
I have a question how did this volcano erupted..side .ways.. long ways what... i missed that part on the new.. s im always on TH-cam watching this volcano .. mountain...grow... in to the waters... i think... im from Winnipeg Canada... i watch.. the news alot..
The volcano is full of cracks. Basically, lava in the summit tube drained out into a line of cracks running all down the east side. That's what's coming out in this video.
Kilauea volcano has two rift zone extending southeast and southwest of the volcano's summit. RIft zones are areas of weakness that serve as conduits for magma. Most of the volcano's recent eruptions, like the 2018 event, have taken place on the southeast rift zone. Unfortunately, several residential subdivisions were built in the southeast rift zone in the 1960s-1970s despite recent eruptions in 1955 and 1960-1961. Most of the homes damaged in 2018 were in these subdivisions. And it's a given that future eruptions will take place in this part of Hawai'i Island.
How is it there are green fronds blowing near the hot lava that's been spewing for days? Beautiful color contrast, but why isn't the greenery burning?
On another video somebody asked same question. Response was that before this started HI has been having record high rainfall. So right now everything just soaked in water.
What is the difference between magma and lava?
Nuts, they're standing talking as if it's nothing important, this could blow up right in their faces, who knows what's under them. CRAZY.
Let's go sightseeing, Eh!
My favorite is 20 minutes after a sinkhole opens up you have 10 people leaning over the edge.
Yea that place could blow any moment
This is your brain on drugs.....any questions?
The Wandering Alatross, you're probably correct on that. We don't have sinkholes here in Hawaii, so I haven't seen it, but given human nature, it figures.
That man was going to say shit hole lol
It looks awesome because this is God's cteation. People just need to get out of the way so he can proceed with his work...creating more lands.
if god exists it is more likely god is more female than male
+Silent Lucidity ASMR yes spirit - with with a stronger pull towards female - thats why we say "mother" nature - na mean?
Carmen Colon childish myths have no place here...take your silly beliefs elsewhere.
+Silent Lucidity ASMR light with a female energy - not gender specific but closer to female than male
+Silent Lucidity ASMR "this wicked flesh" girl stop tripping - this "wicked flesh" is our gift to experience - not all are wicked - just chill and enjoy life while you can
Energy programs need to look into how to capture all that energy from all that heat and gases......transfer it into usable energy🧐
David only if they weren't so greedy, that's a swell idea tho
that's pretty much what that PGV geothermal plant did on top of the last flow right in that area in the 1950's. I wonder if they'll be as keen to try that again on top of this new flow once it solidifies.
The wells are still there and the power plant infrastructure is, so far, untouched. As far as the operators of PGV are concerned, the plant is going to be reopened eventually(unless it's buried in cooling, solid rock before then that is).
Save Rusty if ever evacuated.
Same area. It is the 9th wonder of the planet
where can I find full length videos of the clips used? 1:29 I really want to see for example... take care all.. aloha..
1:31 it's crazy when they hit the wide angle, the flow is massive
I'm watching from New zealand and that's close enough...
Can you imagine how much pressure there is under that lava to shoot it up in the air like that?
Why not at water to the lava my thinking it’s fire and what about use road to stop the lava from spreading if it’s stopped and can’t go anywhere then the lava will burn itself out?
Or garlic.
She’s gonna blow again and it will be huge
great photography-video
Great report.
KUDOS!
FANTASTIC VIDEO!
GREAT CLOSEUPS!!!!
STAY SAFE!
So how many homes and buildings have been destroyed?
About 50. Currently the lava is covering almost 2000 acres.
how far away isit?
Beautiful. 😊👌
How will government restore the lost land?
If the wall on the lava lake were to break out, imagine trying to out run a good reservoir of lava moving at about 9 miles an hour.
>>>>>please just try to be careful, to the residents, God will restore what you've lost.
James Stewart hopefully there are some hills nearby!
hopefully not!
just step aside and let it flow past
9 mile an hour, how about 15 to 30 miles an hour! The lava is still liquid and it's all down hill from there! Your talking millions of cubic feet of liquid lava rushing down the hillside!
that has already cleared it's path SLOWLY, try watching old videos. This didn't happen as a landslide/tidal wave. It oooozed.
300 ft???! wow, thats crazy. its hard to scale when you are not actually there
You should have seen how Kilauea erupted in 1959. fountains in that eruption exceeded 1700ft. lol...
ParAdise acres?
The old guy👺 with the ponytail was going to say "back to the shelter" but said 'senior center' instead. Everybody thinks he was going to say shit hole or something.😹
are you able to get the footage from the UH heli?
2:21 we go back to the shhh---What??? What was he about to say??? LOL
Neitel Agosto shot hole. Yes he was going to say it! Good catch.
Must be like a prison in there...
lmao hilarious
Shelter
"... citz..." is slang for senior citizen center.
Yay ! Let's take a selfie with the lava...
John G lmao oh my what the world has come to
John and Jake, I'm fairly certain that Sky hit this one on the head. Only select people are allowed that close to the lava, and those are not the type who just *have* to have their silly looking head in a shot of lava. News people are allowed, and escorted at particular times, to get news for their respective agencies.
It is pretty cool to see officials taking pictures of it, since they can't really stop it
bomb a trench ?
Nor Dic could work for smaller eruptions, but for one this size it would just fill it and continue on.
Those were the days months in a community shelter.
To think this is what our planet must have looked like when it was being formed. I suppose is not even close to our sun. Our prayers go out to every person affected in Hawaii:(
What if all the cracks are trying to tell us that portion of the island is beginning to slip into the ocean?
not at all
Why are so many people able to buy into that so easily...??? You realize the rarity of an event like that?? Rare even in the context of a geologic timeline.
It’s happened, sure. Is it happening now? No.
It's part of the eastern rift zone of Kilauea. Fissure eruptions like this are fairly common.
rare sure!.. So is winning the lottery!
how far is that even
it’s gonna get worse before it gets better ...
According to all these scientist we have been hearing from this is just in the beginning stages. The Hilina Slump is a major concern.
it will, the entire area is inflating
or it can just stop, saying what it's gonna do with like fortune telling, stop, no one knows
Elizabet h best hope that dam doesn't burst over that road as you will find yourselfs running for your lives. The lava trickles slowly in small amounts. But when you have a 50ft deep lake of super heated lava it will come at you as tsunami of Molton doom! You won't escape and you will perish
Just like my sex life
VERY beautiful place and very dangerous
2:21 Sounded like he was going to say "shit house", or "shit storm", but suddenly remembered he's on teevee.
So relaxing, watching lava engulf a town that had no business being there in the first place.
it didn't engulf a town, try pay attention
thanks for your idiots insight
slimeronio, you're welcome.
truthseekers, the town now rests at the bottom of a lava lake, look it up, it's on all the videos, the power plant has been overtaken by fifty feet of lava. It's the truth, I thought you were into the truth per your avatar.
ryvr madduck typical shithead. Show respect and compassion for people who lost their homes, meanwhile US gov doing shit. You will end like that soon enough, to know, what shit person you are
Where is the Major's cap? Way to lead by example.
300ft? Dude thats less than 100
Chronic_Slayer depth of field. Look into it.
at 1:34 that is crazy looking at how fast its moving.
Amazing
I wonder if scenes like this were the original inspiration for the belief in hellfire?
coralarch, probably, and thus this seems to draw the religious types out to comment on might otherwise be a natural science event.
No doubt seeing it as an indisputable proof of Armageddon being just around the corner? Or just another punishment for the sins of Hawaii?
coralarch this is God letting those who refuse to repent, know what they will be facing for rejecting Jesus Christ.
How silly! Volcanoes are an indispensable part of this planet's ecology. Without them, we would have no weather patterns, nor could new land be created.
Anyone got hotdogs and marshmallows?
Super Dave
Gonna need a LONG stick....
But the Hotdogs and Marshmallows would taste AWESOME!
man doesnt someone have drone vids of this
All that lava was flowing under your feet and could bust out of the ground anywhere...
Yes. Welcome to the Puna district
Hawaii is getting free land. Time to buy land on the big Island.
When I see that wonder,I feel like we are nothing.
MOTHER 🌎 SHE IS BRING MORE TO COME YOU CAN NOT CHANGE HER ..BE SAFE YOU ALL AND PRAYER
"It's very destructive"
Almost as destructive as humans
Jeff Bingaman actually pound for pound, lava has us beat pretty handily. Though I see your point.
Yellowstone national park is famous for its hot springs, geysers, and picturesque vistas. However, it’s the supervolcano lurking under Yellowstone that we have to thank for all of that. An eruption in Yellowstone could be a global cataclysm, but NASA has a plan to reduce the risk while also generating power. The plan is not without risks, and the price tag is high. Still, if it keeps us from being wiped out by clouds of hot ash, it might be something to consider.
Yellowstone hasn’t erupted in about 630,000 years, and there’s no way to predict when it will happen again. It could be tomorrow, or it could take another million years. The point is, it will happen. Well, it will if someone can’t come up with a way to stop it. The NASA plan involves drilling into the caldera from sites outside of Yellowstone to gain access to the magma pocket that powers the supervolcano. That’s the dangerous part - a full eruption of Yellowstone wouldn’t kill that many people, but it would create a 500-mile wide ashfall with areas of the West and Midwest receiving up to four inches of ash. Total sunlight reaching croplands would be substantially (though temporarily) reduced.
Assuming you can drill deep enough to open a channel to the supervolcano, you could use it to generate geothermal power. NASA’s plan calls for water to be piped through the volcano, which would emerge super-heated to about 662 degrees Fahrenheit (350 degrees Celsius). The steam could be used to generate power, but that energy doesn’t just appear from nowhere. It’s coming from the supervolcano, which would cool over time and lower the risk of eruption. Setting up this system would probably cost on the order of $3.5 billion, according to NASA estimates.
The Yellowstone Caldera: Deceptively picturesque.
NASA’s is considering this ambitious plan because of the extreme threat a supervolcano like Yellowstone presents. The Yellowstone Caldera has erupted three times in the past, and each of them has been orders of magnitude larger than the volcanic eruptions with which we’re familiar. There have been three eruptions in Yellowstone, the first of which occurred about 2.1 million years ago. It spread ash across much of North America and left a 50-mile wide crater in Yellowstone, which is now known as the Island Park Caldera. Supervolcanoes like Yellowstone can pump many cubic miles of ash into the atmosphere, which could alter global climate for a decade or more. These types of eruptions are extremely rare, but the Lava Creek eruption rated a VEI (Volcano Explosivity Index) score of 8, and covered a huge swath of the United States.
LavaCreekTuff
The Lava Creek eruption was 640,000 years ago with an ejection volume of 1,000 cubic kilometers. Image by Wikipedia
To put this in further perspective: The eruption of Krakatoa, which destroyed an entire island, is ranked as a VEI 6 event. The most powerful eruption in the past 200 years was Mt. Tambora in 1815. This eruption kicked off what’s known as the Year Without a Summer, in which famine and wild temperature fluctuations occurred worldwide - and Tambora threw “just” 120 cubic kilometers of material. A Yellowstone eruption of comparable size to those we know happened 640 - 2.1 million years ago could be nearly 10x worse.
The more recent Yellowstone eruptions haven’t been quite as large as the first, but any eruption in Yellowstone has the potential to cause widespread destruction. Working on ways to mitigate the danger is a good idea, even if it’s expensive. It would probably take many years to know whether NASA’s plan was just slowing the buildup of pressure or actually reversing it, and in the best case scenario, it would take thousands of years to cool the caldera completely. However, that’s thousands of years Yellowstone could power a large chunk of the US.
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Lawsuits against the PGV plant could be world wide if a Tsunami hits the coast lines.
PGV is just some holes in the ground... how you can connect that to a tsunami risk shows you are really stupid... and uninformed
force majeure
The man on the right of the thumbnail looks like he enjoys the destruction.
300 feet...ummm nope maybe 50 tops.
300 feet is a football field macula kahaau mini me.
You're not there so you have no sense of perspective from these videos.
Time the fall of lava and do the math. It's way over 50'
From where they are standing it's over half a mile to the lava fountains. Maybe looks small on camera but sure as hell wouldnt look small if you would go closer. 50 tops my ass.
David Dowling/Me too!
That lady was holding her camera up above her head to his chin.. bro you take the pictures over bushes...
it's gonna crack like an egg... right along the line of fissures!
i wouldn’t bet on being able to continue to live there, like building a house at the bottom of an avalanche chute or below sea level near the beach , price you pay for paradise I guess, kind of like global warming threading homes in key west
Would seriously move away from the lava lake..If it erupted your to close..🐳🐋🐟🌋🌋🌋
300 feet in air??!!! yeah highly doubt it
No one is going to mention 2:26 ?
Ok.
Under whelming Curiosity what?
It’s such a beautiful view I had to rewind a couple hundred times
THE lava is proof that the earth is alive
I'm sorry but 1:36 looks awesome. You know as in nature rules.
The military standing there going uh,. we can't do anything.
hey Jeff, it got me thinking, couldn't the military bomb some holes and thus make a trench to steer the lava if that was deemed necessary?
Hey, this island is going to blow up, get off it now!
2:21 call it like it is dude, any senior center is a shit hole, run, run to the lava!
Poor people s homes... look a volcano is a volcano... is has its ways...
HELL IN PARADISE...
What if it doesn't stop...
Tutu Pele will increase. Be smart and be safe.
wow
trump: we will meet you with fire and fury...
kilauea: hold my beer and watch this...
the floor is lava pro league
It may go yet that island be careful there
You people should be mad at your realtors. It's there fault not yours .
I would like to see the whole island covered in molton lava...after all the island is made up of multiple live volcano's so it is only logical the island would be covered.
The lava would have to flow uphill, so not all that logical.
come on man dont stomp on my dream.
Dang....😟😟
Every day this eruption seems to get worse
I wonder if its happening cause they built on top of a LIVE FUCKING VOLCANO??? YAH THINK!
1:40-1:50 wow
Please get down fire not allowed
He almost called it a shit hole XD
☝️Allah is the only one of the Allah ok America اللہ اکبر اللہ اکبر
How about NO. Don't lecture us on religion.
Better get the hell out of there people! Is gonna get worst, say goodbye to the beautiful island of Hawaii, because all that is gonna get sunk into the sea!!! Don't say how it happened or why because we all know why is this and other disasters happening around the world!!
Jes C, "we all know... " really ? Are you suggesting that thus is a result of man-made climate change ? Or, did you have another, prehaps even an unscientific theory ?
Nor Dic We human beings are causing all this, so we are paying the consequences of our actions. And no don't say god is doing this because that's not even on the list of the cause.
Lava got it Lookin like a desolate wasteland...
But it will look like the garden of eden in a few years when everything settles down and all the plants regrow.
You can't have creation without destruction. That's how nature works, dude. 😊👍
This continuous cycle of creation and destruction is what makes life possible. 😊👍
i wish the lava would stop killing all the peoples
segeralah bertaubat alam sdh memberi isyarat kebesaran tuhan yg berkuasa
The earth is bleeding.
:D haha... Big news. Do not thrust US gov. Stay safe, people of Hawaii