(Redirected from Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō)
'Puu Ōō' (often written as 'Puu Oo', and is roughly pronounced "Poo-oo Ohh-ohh" or in the
IPA) is a
cinder/spatter cone in the eastern
rift zone of the
Kīlauea volcano of the
Hawaiian Islands. Puu Ōō has been erupting continuously since
January 3,
1983, making it the longest-lived rift-zone eruption of the last two centuries. From 1983 through
1998,
lava from Puu Ōō covered more than
97 km² (37 square miles).
Although the name is often translated as "Hill of the
Ōō Bird" from
Hawaiian, there is a different explanation of the Hawaiian appellation.
[1] The word ''Ōō'' also means ''digging stick''.
[2] Because in Hawaiian legends the volcano goddess
Pele uses her magic rod ''pāoa''
[3] to create volcanic pits,
[4] this seems to be the original intention for the naming.
As of 1998, the eruption had claimed 181 houses, as well as a church, a store, the Wahaula Visitor Center, and many ancient Hawaiian sites. The coastal highway has been closed since
1987, as lava flows covered
13 km (8 miles) to as great a depth as
25 m (80 ft). The eruption has added 544 acres (
2.2 km²) of land to the
island of Hawaii.
Puu Ōō-Kūpaianahā eruption
The Puu Ōō eruption began when fissures split the ground in the remote rainforest of the eastern rift zone. By June 1983, the activity had strengthened and localized to the Puu Ōō vent. Over the next three years, 44 eruptive episodes with lava fountains as high as
460 m (1500 ft) stopped traffic at points across east Hawaii. The fallout of cinder and spatter from the towering lava fountains built a cone
255 m (835 ft) high. In July
1986, the conduit feeding
magma to Puu Ōō ruptured, and the eruption abruptly shifted 3 km downrift to form the Kūpaianahā vent. With the new vent came a new style of eruption: continuous, quiet effusion from a lava pond replaced the episodic high fountaining. Overflows from the pond built a lava shield—a broad, low hill shaped like an overturned
wok.
In November
1986, lava from Kūpaianahā reached the ocean,
12 km (7 miles) to the southeast, inundating the small community of Kapaahu in its path. For the next five years, much of the lava erupted from Kūpaianahā streamed directly into the sea via a
lava tube system that led from the lava pond.
In
1990, the eruption entered its most destructive phase when flows turned eastward and totally destroyed the villages of
Kalapana and
Kaimū. Kaimū Bay and Kalapana Black Sand Beach were also completely covered with lava. Over 100 homes were destroyed by the ever-broadening flow field in a nine-month period. New tubes diverted lava away from Kalapana early in
1991, and lava once again entered the ocean within the
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. The volume of lava erupted from Kūpaianahā declined steadily through 1991, and in early
1992 the vent died. The eruption then returned to Puu Ōō, where flank vents on the west and southwest sides of the cone constructed a new lava shield. Soon lava tubes were feeding lava from the vents to the ocean, with few surface flows in between. The flank vents have held center stage ever since, with the exception of a two-month pause in activity early in
1997 that followed a brief fissure eruption in Napau Crater, a short distance southwest of Puu Ōō.

Cutaway of Puu Ōō January
1997.
On the evening of
January 29 1997, a series of
earthquakes struck Kilauea's east rift zone. Deep within the rift zone,
magma was escaping from the conduit leading to the Puu Ōō vent, cutting off the supply to the ongoing eruption. The lava pond at Puu Ōō drained, and residents 10 miles (
16 km) away heard a low, rumbling roar as the crater floor dropped 500 feet (
150 m) and the west wall of the Puu Ōō cone collapsed. A few hours later, as magma found a new path to the surface, the ground cracked in nearby Napau Crater, and lava fountains lit up the night sky.

Aerial view of Puu Ōō taken in 1990 or 1991
References
★
USGS Volcano Hazards Program: The Puu Ōō-Kūpaianahā eruption: still flowing after all these years (public domain)
★
U.S. Geological Survey fact sheet 144-02: The Puu Ōō-Kūpaianahā eruption of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawaii, 1983 to 2003 (public domain)
1. C. Heliker, D.A. Swanson, T.J. Takahashi: ''The Puu Ōō-Kūpaianaha Eruption of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawaii: The First 20 Years''. In: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. 1676, 2003. Online Version
2. see q&d=D15656 Hawaiian Dictionaries
3. see q&d=D17086 Hawaiian Dictionaries
4. W. D. Westervelt: ''Hawaiian Legends of Volcanoes''. G.H. Ellis Press: Boston 1916. p. 6. see ''How Pele came to Hawaii''
External links
★
Live web cam of the Puu Ōō vent
★
USGS map shows lava flows erupted during the 1983-present activity of Puu Ōō and Kūpaianahā.