Magma: What’s hot and what’s not

A USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory geologist collects a sample of pahoehoe lava on Kilauea Volcano’s East Rift Zone. Steam rising from the flow resulted from heavy rain falling on the hot lava. Analyses of this and other samples provide information on the changing temperatures of Kilauea lavas, which, in turn, reveal information about the volcano’s internal plumbing and magma transport processes. (USGS photo by J. Babb/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey’s Hawaiian Volcano Observatory routinely collect lava samples from Kilauea and use the chemistry of these samples to infer the temperature of magma (molten rock below Earth’s surface).