“The Pohoiki boat ramp is totally blocked by a sandbar.”
Janet Snyder, spokeswoman for Mayor Harry Kim said the boat ramp is still there. However, the black sand created by molten lava solidifying and being shattered as it hits the surf, continues to be transported to the southwest by currents and accumulates in the Pohoiki small boat harbor.
Sluggish lava remains deep in the cone of fissure 8 in Kilauea volcano’s lower East Rift Zone, but the only red lava remaining is that oozing into the Ocean at Kapoho and Ahalanui.
Snyder said Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists entered the restricted zone over the weekend.
“There’s some new cracks probably opened during the Aug. 9 south flank quake,” Snyder said. “But the highest temperatures they measured over the weekend in these cracks are, like 300 (degrees) Fahrenheit. Most of them are 150 Fahrenheit or lower, just plain cold.”
Snyder said there is no subsidence of the crater floor at Halema‘uma‘u, at Kilauea’s summit and “virtually no quakes, only mild steaming,” over the weekend.
“The seismicity’s down to three small quakes, really small. The maximum was at (magnitude) 2.1, and you’re not going to feel that unless you’re right on top of it,” she said.
As of Friday, the Federal Emergency Management Agency had registered 2,688 Hawaii Island residents for possible claims due to lava with $6,345,312 in funding approved. The deadline to register with FEMA has been extended until Sept. 12.
A community meeting on the status of the lava emergency is scheduled for 5 p.m. Tuesday at Pahoa High School cafeteria.
Email John Burnett at jburnett@hawaiitribune-herald.com.