Abstract

"I'm thinking,'Yeah, right,'" Janet Babb recalled reacting upon hearing the oddball message left on her tele phone answering machine on January 25.But a little more than a month later, on March 1–2, the freelance geologist took up the offer. Outfitted in her yellow raincoat, gloves, and gas mask, she used her rock hammer to sample hot lava near the active vent of Hawaii's Kilauea volcano, and drove along the nearby Chain of Craters Road.However, Babb was not up there alone. Accompanying her was a 30‐person film crew, two helicopters, and, of course, her car insurance agent.

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