On 24 May 1969, a deep rumbling started within Kīlauea, the youngest of the volcanoes comprising the island of Hawai'i.

Those were the first moments of the historical Maunaulu eruption – a spectacular outpouring of lava that lasted for a total of 1,774 days, at the time becoming the longest Kīlauea eruption in at least two millennia.

Staff at the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory had noted that the magma reservoir underneath the tip of the volcano had started to swell, but they still didn't expect the magnificent activity that lasted well into the summer of 1974.

So huge was this eruption that the cooling lava created a whole new landscape on the side of Kīlauea, earning the name of "growing mountain", or Maunaulu.

In 1969 alone, twelve huge lava fountains erupted at the site, and much of this activity has been captured for posterity in glorious photographs.

In 2018, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) reminded the world of the Maunaulu eruption with a throwback photo to one of the rarest types of a lava fountain you can possibly get:

Usually, lava just explodes all over the place without any rhyme or reason, making this beautiful, perfectly rounded dome fountain all the more special. (By the way, the foreground is not the ocean, as it might seem at first glance – it's a landscape of cooled lava.)

Here's another version of the photo, taken on 11 October 1969. The original tweet notes its height at roughly 20 meters (65 feet), but according to USGS records, at some point the fountain may have towered as high as 75 meters (246 feet):

A half circle of orange lava splattered against a blue sky(USGS)

Lava fountains, in all their blazing glory of raw exploding geology, can reach the dizzying heights of 500 meters, according to USGS.

They typically happen when lava shoots out of an isolated vent or a fissure in the volcano, or when water in a confined space gets inside a lava tube.

And, if you like this photo, Maunaulu certainly produced more incredible scenery.

On June 25 of the same year, a massive 220-meter (722-foot) fountain of lava shot up from the volcano:

A wall of orange, red and yellow splattered with the appearance of a fiery hot fountain(USGS)

On August 15 of 1969, there was this little splatter of boiling hot rock, just 8 meters (26 feet) high but shaped rather like a searing mushroom cloud. At that point in the eruption, activity like this was almost constantly happening at Maunaulu:

A splash of orange lava set amongst black volcanic rocks(USGS)

One of the most spectacular events during the eruption were these 100-meter high 'lava falls' overflowing the 'Alae Crater on Kīlauea, on 5 August 1969.

"For the two seasoned observers who witnessed this awe-inspiring event, nothing else matched it during the entire Maunaulu eruption," USGS writes on their website.

An eerie landscape of what would look exactly like a waterfall if it wasn't red and orange on a black background, made of lava(USGS)

Even after that stunning event, Kīlauea was far from done inspiring awe in its observers. Another massive lava fountain shot up in the air on October 20, and in this photo you can even see a geologist standing on a viewing platform about 800 meters (2,625 feet) away.

Despite the considerable distance, observers still had to hide behind a stone wall as the heat was so intense – sometimes dry grass right next to the platform would even catch fire.

A small silhouette of a person outlined against a splash of lava in the background(USGS)

Of course, Kīlauea hardly rests. Just nine years after Maunaulu ceased, in 1983 the Pu'u'ō'ō eruption began, producing regular spectacles of lava explosions. Far surpassing its predecessor, it lasted until 30 April 2018, when the crater floor and lava lake catastrophically collapsed.

What's particularly wild is that's not even the longest continually active volcano on our planet. According to Guinness World Records, this honor belongs to Mt Stromboli in Italy, that's been going since at least the 7th century BCE.

You can see the full gallery of the picturesque Maunaulu eruption on the USGS website.

A version of this article was originally published in April 2018.