New Gas Vent in Halema`uma`u Crater Doubles Sulfur Dioxide Emission Rates

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New gas vent in Halema`uma`u crater doubles sulfur dioxide emission rates
From: James P Kauahikaua <jimk@xxxxxxxx>
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A prominent new gas vent broke through the lower east wall of Halema`uma`u
crater on March 12, 2008, doubling the already elevated level of sulfur
dioxide gas being emitted from the crater. The vent was obviously
incandescent by evening of the next day.

Release of sulfur dioxide gas from Kilauea volcano is not new, but the
current emission rates are unusual.  Gas emissions have been unsettled
since June 2007 but the root cause of the recent increase in SO2 emissions
from Halema`uma`u crater is not yet clear.

While it is a remote possibility, a summit eruption is not expected
because the summit is deflating and not experiencing an unusual number of
earthquakes.

Maps, photos, and detailed daily text updates are available on the
Hawaiian Volcano Observatory website at hvo.wr.usgs.gov.

The rate at which sulfur dioxide (SO2) is released at the summit of
Kilauea volcano has typically been 150-200 tonnes/day, but in late
December 2007, the emission rate increased to nearly 300 tonnes/day.  This
rate continued to rise into the new year, and by mid-February 2008, it
fluctuated between 600 and 1,000 tonnes/day.

On March 12, the rate abruptly jumped to 1,500 tonnes/day.  On March 16,
2008, SO2 emission rates reached the highest recorded at Kilauea's summit
since measurements began in 1979 at about 2,500 tonnes/day.

With increased emission rates, the concentration of noxious sulfur dioxide
gas in the air, the cause of respiratory hazards, also rises.  When the
emission rate doubled in December 2007, sulfur dioxide concentrations
exceeded 1 ppm on more than half of Crater Rim Drive between the Southwest
Rift Zone pullout and the Halema`uma`u Overlook parking lot.  The
increased SO2 concentration and associated incidents of respiratory
distress in visitors prompted the National Park Service to restrict access
to roads and trails around Kilauea Caldera.

After the new gas vent opened this week, sulfur dioxide concentrations
exceeded 40 ppm along Crater Rim Drive, significantly increasing
respiratory hazards downwind of the vent.

Sulfur dioxide gas reacts with air, moisture, and sunlight to form tiny
acidic particles that are readily retained in human lungs.  Thus, it is
listed by EPA as one of six criteria air pollutants.  Factories, power
plants, and other industrial sources are required to regulate their output
of SO2 to prevent possible negative effects on human health and the
environment.  Elevated SO2 levels can cause breathing difficulties,
especially in people with preexisting respiratory problems, irritation of
the eyes, nose, and throat, and damage to plants and water.  For more
information on the effects of volcanic gases, check with the International
Volcanic Health Hazard Network at http://ivhhn.org/.

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