Fear
mounts as hurricane ploughs towards Hawaii's volcano
US Military News
Hawaii
- Hurricane Hector regained strength in the eastern Pacific late on
Sunday and swelled into a Category 4 storm again with sustained 140
mph winds as it stayed on target to possibly hit Hawaii by midweek,
officials said.
Some
predictions put the storm on a virtual collision course with the
Kilauea Volcano on the southern part of the island. Lava has been
spewing from vents on its eastern flank since May 3 and its summit
crater is collapsing.
The
National Hurricane Centre put Hector about 1 130 miles southeast of
Hawaii's Big Island and its hurricane force winds stretched 30 miles
out from its centre with tropical force winds of 74 mph extending out
105 miles, the NHC said.
It
was expected to pick up speed from its 14 mph westward crawl into the
central Pacific on Monday, the centre said in an advisory late on
Sunday.
The
NHC forecast gradual weakening on Monday night through to Wednesday.
It
was uncertain if it would hit or just brush by the southern edge of
the Big Island, said a meteorologist at the National Weather
Service's Weather Prediction Centre in College Park Maryland.
Scientists
differ over how hurricanes and volcanoes might interact, including
the question of whether low atmospheric pressure could help trigger
an eruption.
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