
USA: See the fiery face of LAVA eating up one Hawaiian village
The Puna lava flow continued to close in on the village of Pahoa on the Big Island of Hawaii on Thursday. The lava stalled roughly 480 feet (146 metres) from Pahoa Village Road, the main road in the town with a population of about 950.
The lava swallowed a street on the edge of Pahoa on October 26, and has also consumed a cemetery, garden shed, tyres, and large amounts of local vegetation. The lava flow began in June, when the Kilauea volcano erupted.
Kilauea, whose name means "spewing" in Hawaiian, is considered the most active volcano on earth.
Footage courtesy: County of Hawaii

The Puna lava flow continued to close in on the village of Pahoa on the Big Island of Hawaii on Thursday. The lava stalled roughly 480 feet (146 metres) from Pahoa Village Road, the main road in the town with a population of about 950.
The lava swallowed a street on the edge of Pahoa on October 26, and has also consumed a cemetery, garden shed, tyres, and large amounts of local vegetation. The lava flow began in June, when the Kilauea volcano erupted.
Kilauea, whose name means "spewing" in Hawaiian, is considered the most active volcano on earth.
Footage courtesy: County of Hawaii