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Hawaii’s Kilauea Erupts Again, Sending Ash Plume 25,000 Feet Into the Sky

The 43rd eruptive episode at Kilauea sent lava fountains over 1,300 feet high and ashfall warnings were issued as volcanic debris disrupted local roads and communities.

  • Kilauea volcano in Hawaii erupted on March 10, 2026, sending an ash plume up to 30,000 feet high and leading to hazardous conditions.
  • Authorities issued warnings about ashfall and respiratory irritation, closed roads and areas around the volcano, and advised following official guidance.
  • The eruption involved lava fountains over 1,300 feet high, covering part of the Halema'uma'u crater floor, and was part of an ongoing episodic summit eruption at Kilauea since late 2024.
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A Hawaiian volcano's 43rd eruption has sent lava as high as the Empire State. Lava spewing hundreds of meters into the air has been captured during a Hawaiian volcano eruption. According to NBC News and other foreign media outlets on the 11th (local time), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) reported that the previous day, Kilauea, located on the eastern side of the Big Island of Hawaii,...

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This is the 43rd eruption - Watch video

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Football-sized tephra falls from sky amid lava fountains at Hawaii's Kīlauea volcano

Lava fountained 1,000 feet in the air on Tuesday.

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Hawaii Tribune-Herald broke the news in on Tuesday, March 10, 2026.
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