Volcano Watch: Pau or paused? What’s the difference?

Using digital elevation models (DEMs), created from photos taken during helicopter overflights of Kilauea’s summit, HVO scientists tracked the rise of the lava lake (bottom panel). The top two panels show a pre-eruption DEM of Halema‘uma‘u crater from 2019 (top left) and a DEM of the crater from May 13 (top right). The darker line in the top panels shows the elevation profile line used for the bottom panel, which measures one mile in length. The profile shows the “cone-like” shape of the crater that led to rapid filling early in the eruption when effusion rates were high. The level of the lake rose much more slowly from January to May as the effusion rate declined and the surface area increased. The final depth of the lava lake was 751 feet and the final volume was 54 million cubic yards. (USGS graphic and data processing by B. Carr/Special to West Hawaii Today)

What causes an eruption to pause? A pause is caused by an interruption in the supply of magma to the eruption site or vent. Now, how do we know the eruption has paused? Well, that’s a deceptively simple question with a surprisingly complex answer in this situation.