For the first time in over 40 years, there is no lava flowing into the ocean nor anywhere. The air is no longer foggy with vog, the island of Hawaii has crisp clean air. The people are trying to get the state to put in roads to there homes but that is a major process, and many have zero ways to return home which roads are 30 feet deep in lava.
The last update from USGS-HVO on Kīlauea was quite comprehensive, overall the volcano is quiet. Based upon the historical record the most likely place for any new activity is going to be inside the Kilauea caldera, likely to happen within a few years, this is our conclusion as well. Potentially it could be years before magma is erupted rather than stored, the longest pause in activity at Kilauea was 17 years. Based on historical observations, the next eruption on one of the volcano's rift zones will be a decade or longer.
Large scale steam-driven explosions at the Kīlauea Summit similar to the events of 1790 and centuries prior cannot be ruled out in the future, but they’re not indicated at this time. One of the largest questions currently is if an activity will return to an effusive style of eruption seen over the last 200 years or a return to more explosive activity of previous centuries. Similarly, the possibility of renewed summit collapse events cannot be ruled out, however, monitoring data does not suggest this is occurring.
So for now the first time in two decades the alert level on this volcano is down to normal.

The last update from USGS-HVO on Kīlauea was quite comprehensive, overall the volcano is quiet. Based upon the historical record the most likely place for any new activity is going to be inside the Kilauea caldera, likely to happen within a few years, this is our conclusion as well. Potentially it could be years before magma is erupted rather than stored, the longest pause in activity at Kilauea was 17 years. Based on historical observations, the next eruption on one of the volcano's rift zones will be a decade or longer.
Large scale steam-driven explosions at the Kīlauea Summit similar to the events of 1790 and centuries prior cannot be ruled out in the future, but they’re not indicated at this time. One of the largest questions currently is if an activity will return to an effusive style of eruption seen over the last 200 years or a return to more explosive activity of previous centuries. Similarly, the possibility of renewed summit collapse events cannot be ruled out, however, monitoring data does not suggest this is occurring.
So for now the first time in two decades the alert level on this volcano is down to normal.

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