For more than two weeks, Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano has been erupting. Slow-moving rivers of lava have seeped out of cracks in the volcano. The lava has covered roads and houses. But on May 17, the eruption entered a new explosive stage, shooting a plume of ash more than 9,100 meters (30,000 feet) into the air. Pebbles and larger rocks also began shooting out of the caldera. That’s the crater at the top of a volcano where lava, gases, and ash escape.
For days, scientists monitoring the volcano had been warning that an eruption like this could happen. At the top of the volcano is Halemaumau (HAH-lay-maoh-maoh) crater. Nestled inside this crater is a lake of bubbling lava. Usually, the lava in that lake stays at a certain level. But during the current eruption, the level dropped more than 215 meters (700 feet). The lava is now at its lowest level since the lake formed in 2008!