Prayers? Bombs? Hawaii History Shows Stopping Lava Not Easy

Prayer. Bombs. Walls. Over the decades, people have tried all of them to stanch the flow of lava from Hawaii’s volcanoes as it lumbered toward roads, homes and infrastructure.

Now Mauna Loa — the world’s largest active volcano — is erupting again, and lava is slowly approaching a major thoroughfare connecting the Big Island’s east and west sides. And once more, people are asking if anything can be done to stop or divert the flow.

“It comes up every time there’s an eruption and there’s lava heading towards habited areas or highways,” said Scott Rowland, a geologist at the University of Hawaii. “Some people say, ‘Build a wall’ or ‘Board up,’ and other people say, ‘No, don’t!”

Humans have rarely had much success stopping lava and, despite the world’s technological advances, doing so is still difficult and dependent on the force of the flow and the terrain. But many in Hawaii also question the wisdom of interfering with nature and Pele, the Hawaiian deity of volcanoes and fire.

Prayers to Pele

Attempts to divert lava have a long history in Hawaii.

In 1881, the governor of Hawaii Island declared a day of prayer to stop lava from Mauna Loa as it headed for Hilo. The lava kept coming.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, Princess Regent Lili’uokalani and her department heads went to Hilo and considered ways to save the town. They developed plans to build barriers to divert the flow and place dynamite along a lava tube to drain the molten rock supply.

Princess Ruth Ke’elikolani approached the flow, offered brandy and red scarves and chanted, asking Pele to stop the flow and go home. The flow stopped before the barriers were built.

More than 50 years later, Thomas A. Jaggar, the founder of the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, asked U.S. Army Air Services to send planes to bomb a Mauna Loa vent to disrupt lava channels.

Lt. Col. George S. Patton, who later became famous as a general in Europe during World War II, directed planes to drop 20 272-kilogram demolition bombs, according to a National Park Service account of the campaign. The bombs each had 161 kilograms of TNT. The planes also dropped 20 smaller bombs that only had black powder charge.

Jagger said the bombing helped to “hasten the end of the flow,” but Howard Stearns, a U.S. Geological Survey geologist onboard the last bombing run, was doubtful. In his 1983 autobiography, he wrote: “I am sure it was a coincidence.”

According to the park service, geologists today also are doubtful the bombing stopped the lava flow, which didn’t end with the bombing. Instead, the flows waned over the next few days and didn’t change paths.

Local advises to go with the flow

Rowland said authorities could use a bulldozer to pile a big berm of broken rock in front of Daniel K. Inouye Highway. If the terrain is flat, then lava would pile up behind the wall. But the lava may flow over it, like it did when something similar was attempted in Kapoho town in 1960.

Rapidly moving lava flows, like those from Kilauea volcano in 2018, would be more difficult to stop, he said.

“It would have been really hard to build the walls fast enough for them. And they were heading towards groups of homes. And so you would perhaps be sacrificing some homes for others, which would just be a legal mess,” he said.

He said he believes most people in Hawaii wouldn’t want to build a wall to protect the highway because it would “mess with Pele.”

If lava crosses the highway, Rowland said officials could rebuild that section of the road like they did in 2018 when different routes were covered. There are no current plans to try to divert the flow, a county official said.

Thinking you should physically divert lava is a Western idea rooted in the notion that humans have to control everything, said Kealoha Pisciotta, a Native Hawaiian cultural practitioner. She said people need to adjust to the lava, not the other way around.

Source: Voice of America

Malawi expands access to the malaria vaccine

Lilongwe, Malawi. The World Health Organization (WHO) congratulates the Government of Malawi for the launch of expanded delivery of the first malaria vaccine – RTS,S/AS01 (RTS,S) – which will enable thousands more children at high risk of malaria illness and death to benefit from the additional malaria prevention.

The RTS,S malaria vaccine is the first vaccine recommended for use to prevent malaria and significantly reduces life-threatening severe malaria in children. If implemented broadly it could save tens of thousands of lives each year.

In his keynote remarks at the launch, held in Mchinji District, the Honorable Secretary for Health Dr Charles Mwansambo said the expansion of malaria vaccination “has an important role in the history of the fight against malaria, not only in Malawi but globally.”

“The Malawi Government through the Ministry of Health would like to affirm its commitment to continue supporting malaria control interventions in the country, including the expansion of this vaccine to areas not currently benefitting from the vaccine,” he said.

“We applaud Malawi’s leadership to move this breakthrough malaria vaccine forward. Malawi was the first country in the world to launch the routine use of the malaria vaccine in pilot implementation three years ago, and today it is the first to expand access to the life-saving vaccine,” said WHO Representative Dr Neema Rusibamayila Kimambo.

“We are committed to continuing to work with the Government of Malawi and African and global health partners to increase access to the vaccine in areas of moderate to high malaria transmission to maximize its effects,” she said.

The Malawi Ministry of Health launched the pilot implementation of the malaria vaccine in 11 districts in April 2019, followed by Ghana and then Kenya. To date, more than 400 000 children in Malawi have received at least one dose of the malaria vaccine; more than 1.2 million children have been reached with the malaria vaccine across the three pilot countries in Africa.

The malaria vaccine expansion will start first with areas that were not receiving the vaccine in the 11 pilot districts of Mangochi, Balaka, Machinga, Nsanje, Chikwawa, Phalombe, Mchinji, Lilongwe, Ntchisi, NkhataBay, and Karonga.

The malaria vaccine is now one of the WHO recommended interventions to prevent malaria in children, along with other interventions such as long-lasting insecticide treated bed-nets, indoor residual spraying and malaria chemoprevention strategies.

The pilots will continue in Malawi, Ghana and Kenya through 2023 to understand the added value of the fourth vaccine dose, and to measure the longer-term impact of the vaccine on child deaths.

The pilot programme is coordinated by WHO and supported by PATH, UNICEF, GSK and other partners, with funding provided by Gavi; the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; and Unitaid.

Source: World Health Organization