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Volcano erupts in Hawaii, sends lava shooting up over 300 feet high

The Hawaii Volcano Observatory says lava fountains were reaching over 330 feet Wednesday and would likely go higher before subsiding.
Credit: United States Geological Survey via AP
Lava fountains shoot up high in the latest episode of an ongoing eruption of Kilauea volcano inside Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, June 11, 2025

HILO, Hawaii — One of the world’s most active volcanoes, Kilauea on Hawaii’s Big Island, began spewing lava from the north vent Wednesday, the latest event in an ongoing eruption that began almost six months ago.

Lava fountains reached heights of more than 330 feet (100 meters) and feeding multiple lava streams. Scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey’s Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said the fountains were likely to go higher.

The latest event was preceded by gas-pistoning, in which gas accumulates at a lava column's top within a vent, on Tuesday.

The observatory said this process causes the lava surface to rise or piston. “Eventually, gas escapes as splatter/lava is erupted, and lave drains back into the vent,” the observatory wrote on its Facebook page.

Lava Sampling

Talk about a molten career path. The staff at U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)'s Hawaiian Volcano Observatory closely monitor Hawai‘i’s volcanoes. They track earthquakes, study eruptions, and share what’s happening and what they learn to help keep communities safe. These red-hot samples help scientists learn more about what's happening deep inside the volcano’s magma chambers. Video Description: A USGS geologist carefully scoops molten lava from an active flow and drops it into a metal bucket, then cools it with water.

Posted by U.S. Department of the Interior on Wednesday, June 11, 2025

These were occurring up to 10 times an hour, but increased in intensity until a small, sustained dome fountain began to feed flows to the crater floor a day later.

It is the 25th eruptive episode since the volcano on the southeastern part of the island began erupting Dec. 23. It has been pausing and resuming since.

Most of the eruptive episodes have spewed lava for about a day or less, with pauses between them generally lasting a few days.

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