What do we call new land at Kilauea Volcano’s ocean entries?

This cross-section shows the structure of a lava delta and highlights the hazards of these unstable features. Despite layers of cooled, solid lava on the delta surface, the unstable foundation (white) often shifts along zones of weakness (dashed black line) within the delta. (Courtesy / J. Johnson, USGS)

Kilauea Volcano’s Kamokuna lava delta is pictured on Oct. 6. Multiple streams of lava enter the ocean on both sides of the delta created small plumes of laze (lava haze). The visible part of the delta, which is deceptively stable, was built by many small lava flows accumulating on an unstable foundation of unconsolidated volcanic rock fragments. (Courtsy /L. DeSmither, USGS)

If you follow Kilauea Volcano’s ongoing East Rift Zone eruption, you are likely aware that when lava enters the ocean, it often forms new land. But what is this new land called?