Between 1 and 2 PM (Hawaiian time) on August 3, the floor to the Puu O
o crater collapsed in spectacular fashion - and luckily for us, many Eruptions readers were watching the webcams at the time and saw the event unfold. We even have a great time-lapse video of the event thanks to *Eruptions *reader Pgen Pgen. In it, you can clearly see the hardened floor of the crater begin to slump in the middle and over the course of 30-40 minutes, collapse into the Puu O
o crater. At the same time this was happening, a breach formed in the Puu O
o cone and a lava flow began on the flanks of Kilauea - this is typical for a spatter cone like Puu O
o as they are made of loosely consolidated material spit out during the basaltic eruptions of the vent. So, sometime lava will punch through a weak spot in the base of a cone and produce a lava flow, much like what we see now.
This lava flow broke out of the west flank of the Puu O
o cone, less than a mile from the Kamoamoa Fissure that was active earlier this year. This new lava flow effectively drained the lava lake at Puu O
o and has moved 3 km downslope in less than 24 hours. You can see the breakout on the cone in the image below - it does remind me of puncturing a bucket and watching the water flow out the bottom. You can also see a time-lapse of the lava flow created by Eruptions reader Raving that captures the flow as night falls.
The Puu O
o breakout lava flow as seen on August 3, 2011. Click here to see a larger version. Image courtesy of HVO/USGS.
Be sure to keep your eyes glued to the West Puu O
o webcam (amongst other Kilauea webcams) to see how this new activity develops. It certainly has been an exciting year at the Big Island's most active volcano.
Top left: Halfway through the collapse of the Puu O
o crater floor collapse on August 3, 2011.