"The highest that they observed early in the morning was closer to 90 meters [295 feet], generating lava flows that are covering part of the caldera floor," Katie Mulliken, a geologist at the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, told SFGATE.
"[There are] no eruption-related closures at this time, and the winds are currently blowing the volcanic gas away from the open viewing areas," Jessica Ferracane, a spokesperson for Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, told SFGATE.
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