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Posted: Wed, 30 May 2018 05:00:06 GMT

FAST-moving lava has been advancing down a suburban street as Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano enters its fourth week of a dramatic eruption.

The lava from the volcano’s fissure 7 was pictured moving down Leilani Avenue in the suburb of Leilani Estates on Hawaii’s Big Island, with a lava fountain also seen in the background.

Lava fountains have been blasting more than 60m in the air from Kilauea volcano in its biggest eruption cycle in a century.

The flow near Leilani Estates has already destroyed at least 82 structures, including 41 homes, since the eruption began in early May.

At least a dozen more structures were believed to have been destroyed by lava flow on Sunday and Monday, including the home of bed and breakfast owner Petra Wiesenbauer.

Ms Wiesenbauer told USA Todayshe left her home and moved into a rental property when she got a phone call from her neighbour on Sunday.

“He said his house was on fire and mine was next,” she said.

“They stood on my roof and watched his house burn down.

“A week ago I mowed the grass. There was this hope things would normalise, stabilise, and we’d be able to move back.”

When she went back, her house was “just a pile of rubble”.

“There was nothing left,” she said.

The quick movement of lava has prompted authorities to close a major highway on the Big Island, Highway 132, with nearby residents urged to stay alert for updates and evacuation orders.

Authorities are also warning of possible injury to people’s eyes and lungs due to sharp strands of volcanic glass fibres in the wind, following an explosion of ash at the volcano’s summit that shot 4600m in the air.

The US Geological Survey said, the latest outburst in a month of volcanic activity. The agency warned ash was drifting northwest and could affect anyone in the summit area.

The eruption of Kilauea volcano, a major tourist attraction on the Big Island, has not affected flights in the area but its eruption is expected to affect tourism.

The closure of the Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park could cost the local economy more than $200 million, the National Park Service said.

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