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USA HAWAII VULKAN KILAUEA EINSTURZ
In this photo provided by the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, the collapse of 44-acres, (17.6-hectares) at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park is seen falling into the ocean Monday, Nov. 28, 2005, exposing a 60-foot cliff and a 6-foot in diameter stream of lava shooting from the cliff face. The glowing lava has since formed a ramp of new land as it continues to pour out into the ocean sending up a tower of steam. The collapse of solidified lava and sea cliff is the largest since Kilauea Volcano began its current eruption in 1983. (KEYSTONE/AP Photo/Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Observatory)
Instructions
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY'S HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY
License
Rights Managed
Date created
20051101
Place
HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK
Credit
KEYSTONE
Source
AP U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY'S HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY
Byline
Size
2304 x 3456 px
File type
JPEG