Two hundred years of written observations of Kilauea’s summit activity

The most recent eruption at the summit of Kilauea began on June 7 and lasted about two weeks. The current refilling phase at the summit, following the 2018 collapse, is part of a cycle of draining and refilling that has occurred many times in the past 200 years. (courtesy photo/USGS image)

On August 1, 1823, an English missionary named William Ellis visited Kilauea caldera with his Hawaiian guides on a tour of the island of Hawaii. He and his missionary companions were the first westerners to visit the summit of Kilauea, and the book that Ellis later published includes the first contemporary written observations of Kilauea’s eruptive activity.