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Lava explosion in Hawaii leaves 23 injured on tour boat

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An explosion caused by lava oozing into the ocean sent molten rock crashing through the roof of a sightseeing boat off Hawaii’s Big Island, injuring 23 people Monday, officials said.
  
They were aboard a tour boat that takes visitors to see lava plunging into the ocean from the long-erupting Kilauea volcano that has been vigorously shooting lava from a new vent in the ground for the past two months.
  
The U.S. Geological Survey says explosions of varying sizes happen whenever 2,000-degree (1,093-degree Celsius) lava enters much colder seawater. Some of those explosions can be so tiny they are hard to see. But when the conditions are just right, much larger explosions send molten rock and other debris high into the air, according to USGS geologist Janet Babb.
  
The lava punctured the boat’s roof, leaving a gaping hole, firefighters said.
  
A woman in her 20s was in serious condition with a broken thigh bone, the Hawaii County Fire Department said. She was transported to Honolulu for further treatment, said Hilo Medical Center spokeswoman Elena Cabatu.
  
Twenty-two others suffered burns and scrapes, including 12 that were treated at the Hilo hospital and released.
  
Shane Turpin, the owner and captain of the vessel that was hit, said he never saw the explosion that rained molten rock down on top of his boat.
  
He and his tour group had been in the area for about 20 minutes making passes of the ocean entry about 500 yards offshore, Turpin said.
  
He didn’t observe "any major explosions," so he navigated his vessel closer, to about 250 yards away from the lava.
  
"As we were exiting the zone, all of a sudden everything around us exploded," he said. "It was everywhere."
  
Turpin said he had no idea just how big the blast was until he saw video of the event later on shore.
  
"It was immense," he said. "I had no idea. We didn’t see it."
  
Monday’s large blast may also be related to the undersea landscape and the amount of lava being produced by a fissure miles from the coast.
  
Babb said sometimes molten rock can become encrusted underwater, and when that crust breaks large amounts of lava hit the water and create huge steam explosions.
  
"How high and how far really depends on the vigor of the steam explosion, and that depends on the amount of lava going into the ocean," Babb said. "Based on a lot of years of observations of ocean entries," USGS estimates these explosions can send debris up to 300 meters in any direction.
  
In a flow that reached the ocean in 2016, the lava "hit a steep slope and was very quickly carried down to deeper parts of the ocean," Babb said. But the offshore topography of the new ocean entry is shallow, meaning explosions could occur much closer to the surface.
  
And the volume of lava now entering the ocean is much higher than in previous eruptions, Babb said. The active eruption site is sending as much as 100 cubic meters of lava per second snaking down to the sea. In the 2016-2017 flow to the south, there was only about 4 cubic meters per second being erupted.
  
Turpin, who has lived on the Big Island since 1983, said that he has been observing and documenting these explosions and that this type of activity is new to him. There were no warning signs before the blast, he said.
  
"There’s something new. There’s something really new," he said. "And I’ve been documenting them a bit."
  
He said he had visited one woman who sustained serious injuries in the hospital.