Volcano Watch: Students used science to monitor eruption air

Students from the Teaching Through Technology (T3) Alliance, University of Hawaii Hilo Upward Bound summer program, install an air-quality monitoring station outside the Dragon’s Eye Learning Center on Papaya Farms Road. (Adam Low, T3 Alliance/Courtesy Photo)
Teaching Through Technology (T3) Alliance students in the University of Hawaii Hilo Upward Bound summer program install a large display showing measurements from their air-quality monitoring station outside the Pahoa Community Center, which was used as a temporary shelter for displaced residents from Kilauea Volcano’s 2018 eruption. (Adam Low, T3 Alliance/Courtesy Photo)

HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK — During the 2018 eruption of Kilauea Volcano, when fissures erupted and lava flowed in the lower East Rift Zone (LERZ), many Puna residents were displaced from their homes. We, as a community, watched from the sidelines as the eruption went on, helpless in averting the course of nature.