WATCH: Lava fountain height soars in latest episode of Hawaii volcano eruption

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HONOLULU (AP) — Lava fountains from a Hawaii volcano reached heights of 600 feet (180 meters) during the latest episode of an eruption that has been pausing and resuming for several months.

Fountains dropped in height 250 feet (80 meters) to 300 feet (90 meters) on Tuesday night, according to the Hawaii Volcano Observatory. On Wednesday morning, a webcam still showed tall bursts of fiery red lava and billowing smoke.

The eruption began Dec. 23 in a crater at the summit of Kilauea, one of the world’s most active volcanoes, in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island.

Tuesday marked the eruption’s 12th episode. What began in the morning with sporadic, small flows became continuous fountaining in the afternoon, the observatory said. Lava fountains reached 150 to 165 feet (45 to 60 meters) and then later grew.

No residential areas have been threatened by the eruption. People have been flocking to overlook sites inside the park for views of the fiery show.

The length of time for each fountaining episode has varied from several hours to several days. Episodes have been separated by pauses lasting from less than 24 hours to 12 days, according to the observatory.

Class A state boys hockey: Mahtomedi falls to defending state champion St. Cloud Cathedral

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There’s something about the state tournament that usually brings out the best in the Mahtomedi boys hockey team.

Unfortunately for the Zephyrs, they ran into a buzzsaw that is defending state champion St. Cloud Cathedral on Wednesday afternoon at the Xcel Energy Center, and they suffered a 3-0 loss in the Class A quarterfinals.

As disappointing as the result was for Mahtomedi, however, the fact that it reached the state tournament in any capacity was a victory in and of itself. It proves the Zephyrs were much better than their 11-16-2 record might suggest.

That said, Mahtomedi couldn’t get anything going against St. Cloud Cathedral, which took the next step in their quest for a repeat.

It only took the Crusaders a few minutes to jump ahead early in the first period as senior Jaeger Wood dug a puck out below the red line, then found senior Joey Gillespie, who cashed in to make it 1-0.

The lead grew for St. Cloud Cathedral midway through the second period when freshman Bo Schmidt taking matters into his own hands. After possessing the puck in the neutral zone, he muscled his way up the ice with a reverse check, then finished the job by firing a snipe top shelf to make it 2-0.

In desperate need of a response, the Zephyrs earned a power play midway through the third period, positioning themselves to get back into the game.

Instead, the Crusaders put the game away for good when senior John Hirschfeld drove the net on the penalty kill, then found Gillespie on the door step for a shorthanded goal that stretched the lead to 3-0.

Though it certainly wasn’t the result Mahtomedi was looking for, the future appears to be bright for the program, with a number of underclassmen getting experience in the state tournament that could pay off down the road.

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State hockey: Stillwater is back in the tournament, led by a deep, talented crop of seniors

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Greg Zanon has gained a firm grasp of what’s required to reach the state tournament since taking over as Stillwater’s head boys coach in 2019 – a lot.

“Obviously the state tournament is always the goal, and we haven’t been able to do that,” Zanon said. “We had some good teams along the way, and we had some unfortunate things happen in certain games.”

Sometimes it’s a bad bout of puck luck. Other times it’s an injury. Stillwater lost Cooper Wylie, now a key defenseman for St. Cloud State, ahead of the playoffs in 2020 as the then senior battled stomach ulcers. Other kids miss time for various reasons.

The Stillwater Ponies head coach Greg Zanon celebrates defeating the Hill Murray Pioneers In in the 2025 MSHSL Class 2A Section 4 Championship at Aldrich Arena in Maplewood on Friday, Feb. 28, 2025. Matt Blewett/Special to Pioneer Press

The stars often have to align for a deep postseason run. And, this season, the Ponies time has finally arrived. Zanon has Stillwater in the state tournament for just the third time ever, and the first since 2016.

The second-seeded Ponies will meet seventh-seeded Andover in the Class 2A quarterfinals at 11 a.m. Thursday at Xcel Energy Center.

“This year just really unfolded the way we’d hoped,” Zanon said. “Our players need, obviously, the most credit of all. They’re the ones that come every day and listen and put in the time to do what they need to do to make things happen. It’s been one heck of a ride, I’ll tell you that.”

One driven by a deep, talented crop of seniors. The Ponies have six players with 40-plus points this season, the top five of those – Brody Dustin, Trey Fredenberg, Blake Vanek, Matthew Volkman and Luke Myers – are seniors, with the sixth-leading scorer being junior Luca Jarvis.

Zanon said that scoring talent spread across two dynamic lines gives Stillwater “a little bit of an advantage” in that it’s likely at least one will produce on the scoresheet each time out, and it doesn’t matter which.

In Stillwater’s section final upset of Hill-Murray, it was the line of Frederburg, Jarvis and Volkman posting most of the production, with Volkman netting a hat trick, including the winner in the second overtime. But it could very well be the other line’s turn at some point this weekend.

“We’ve talked about this for a month or so – we don’t need one hero,” Zanon said. “Eventually, it turns into one hero, but we need the team playing like a group. One line going out there, and maybe you don’t score, but you’re setting up the next line for a possible opportunity, and just kind of rolling from line to line and making sure that, when you’re out there and it’s on your stick, you can deliver, and that’s what we’ve gotten out of our group this year.”

Zanon and assistant coach Thomas Vanek are both former NHLers – both of whom also had stints with the Wild. Yet neither truly knows what to expect this week in St. Paul. The players have attended the tournament as fans, but you don’t get a true feel for the lights until the skates hit the ice.

But an advantage for the Ponies this week as they attempt to win three games in three days to claim the program’s first state title is the team’s adaptability – a likely product of a veteran-laden roster.

“We’re able to watch video on a team and go into a practice before a game and are able to teach them something new that might be able to help them, and we’re able to go and do it right away,” Zanno said. “This group of guys and their ability to adapt to situations and things we throw at them is just amazing.”

He wasn’t sure what to expect from his players at Monday’s practice, just a couple days removed from an emotionally-charged section final victory. Perhaps he shouldn’t have been surprised to find his kids were ready to work.

Zanon noted it was “pure joy” when Volkman potted the game winner on Friday. There was an immediate feeling of “Yes!” But he nor Thomas Vanek were ecstatic for themselves. They’ve had their own runs of hockey successes.

“(We) wanted it more for the kids than for ourselves, because we know the effort and the work that they’ve put in, and the demand we’ve put on them in practices and off-ice workouts. They don’t shy away and they take everything that we tell them and they try to implement it,” Zanon said. “The joy that they get out of this is why we do this, is why we try to give back to our community after we played our time. Our time is done, and now it’s our job to just give back, and hopefully (the kids) have the greatest weekend of their lives.”

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Avalanche buries at least 3 skiers near Anchorage, Alaska officials say

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By MARK THIESSEN

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — An avalanche in Alaska backcountry swept up and buried three skiers under a blanket of snow that could be as deep as a 10-story building, Alaska State Troopers said Wednesday.

While troopers have not been able to assess the site yet, “based on the information provided by the operator, unfortunately, we do not believe that any of the three missing persons survived the avalanche,” Austin McDaniel, a spokesperson for the Alaska State Troopers, said in a text to The Associated Press.

If the deaths are confirmed it would be the deadliest U.S. avalanche since three climbers were killed in a slide in Washington’s Cascade Mountains two years ago.

The slide happened late Tuesday afternoon near the skiing community of Girdwood, located about 40 miles (64 kilometers) south of Anchorage, said McDaniel.

Guides from the heli-skiing company attempted to locate the skiers. Using avalanche beacons, the guides identified a probable area where the skiers were buried, at a depth of 40 feet (12 meters) to 100 feet (30 meters), McDaniel said in a later email.

“The guides were unable to recover the three skiers due to the depth. Due to considerable avalanche risk in this area and limited daylight, no further recovery operations were conducted on March 4,” he said. “If weather and conditions allow for it, Troopers plan to assess avalanche conditions from the air and determine recovery options with individuals that have experience making avalanche recoveries.”

The avalanche site is 8 miles northeast of the airport in Girdwood.

Girdwood is the skiing capital of Alaska, and home to the Alyeska Resort, at the base of Mount Alyeska, where people downhill ski or snowboard amid stunning views of Turnagain Arm. At the top of the mountain is the Seven Glaciers Restaurant, named for its view.

Heli-skiing is using a helicopter to reach the top of a mountain in remote backcountry areas where there are no ski lifts, and a person either skis or snowboards down the mountain.

Each winter, 25 to 30 people die in avalanches in the U.S., according to the National Avalanche Center.

Fifteen people have been killed across the U.S. by avalanches so far this winter. Among them were 10 backcountry skiers or snowboarders, four people on snow machines and a ski patroller, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center.

Colorado experiences the most avalanche deaths, with 325 people killed since 1950. Alaska ranks second, with 172 deaths in that time period, according to the center.

In 2021, Czech billionaire Petr Kellner and four others died in a helicopter crash during a heliskiing tour near Knik Glacier, in the Chugach Mountains just north of Anchorage. A year later, a heli-ski guide scouting an area for clients died when an avalanche carried his body nearly 1500 feet (457 meters) down a mountain, Alaska State Troopers said at the time.

There have been several deaths reported elsewhere this year.

One person was killed in an avalanche in central Colorado on Feb. 22. Authorities in Grand County responded to what they described as a skier-triggered avalanche in a steep area known as “The Fingers” above Berthoud Pass. It was the second reported avalanche in the county that day.

That avalanche death was the third in Colorado this winter and the second fatality in less than a week in that state, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center. A Crested Butte snowboarder was killed Feb. 20 in a slide west of Silverton.

Elsewhere, three people died in avalanches Feb. 17 — one person near Lake Tahoe and two backcountry skiers in Oregon’s Cascade Mountains. On Feb. 8, a well-known outdoor guide was caught in an avalanche in Utah and was killed.

Associated Press writers Becky Bohrer in Juneau and Matthew Brown in Missoula, Montana, contributed to this report.