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Geology of the Big Island of Hawai‘i

Geology of the Big Island of Hawai‘i

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Geology of the Big Island of Hawai‘i. Island of Hawai‘i. The Big Island of Hawai‘i. Youngest Hawaiian island Five volcanoes above sea level: Kohala, Mauna Kea, Hualalai, Mauna Loa, and Kilauea Two submarine volcanoes: Mahukona and Lo ‘ ihi Submarine rift zones Giant submarine landslides - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Geology of the Big Island of Hawai‘i

Geology of the Big Island of Hawai‘i

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Island of Hawai‘i

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The Big Island of Hawai‘i• Youngest Hawaiian island• Five volcanoes above sea level: Kohala, Mauna Kea,

Hualalai, Mauna Loa, and Kilauea

• Two submarine volcanoes: Mahukona and Lo‘ihi

• Submarine rift zones• Giant submarine landslides• Pahala Ash

– a layer of weathered ash found all over the island

– may come from more than one volcano• Mauna Kea in the north

• Kilauea in the south

– has been used to try to correlate age of Big Island volcanoes

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submarine rift zones

Lō‘ihi Seamount

submarineland slides

submarineland slides

submarine rift zone

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Kohala

Mauna Kea

KīlaueaMauna Loa

Hualālai

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distribution and thickness ofPāhala Ash

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Kohala Volcano• Oldest of the Big Island volcanoes

• A single set of rift zones (two total)

• No exposed caldera--probably buried by postshield lavas

• Shield Stage rocks:– Pololo Member, 500 to 300 k.y.a. (k.y.a. = thousand years ago)

– tholeiitic basalt, exposed in valley walls

– alkalic basalts appear toward end of shield stage

• Postshield Stage rocks:– Hawi Member, 260 to 60 k.y.a.

– mostly mugearite, some trachyite (alkalic rocks more felsic than hawaiite)

• Amphitheater-headed valleys, such as Waipi‘o Valley– are drowned valleys; were cut when local sea level was lower

• Giant submarine landslides

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Kohala Volcano

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cinder cones near the summit of Kohala Volcano

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Waipi‘o Valley before the tsunami of 1946

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Mauna Kea Volcano• Three rift zones (postshield stage)• Filled caldera• Shield Stage rocks

– Hamakua Member, 380 k.y.a. to ?• tholeiitic basalts grading upwards into alkalic rocks (alkalic basalts and

hawaiiites)• exposed in sea cliffs along the Hamākua Coast

• Postshield Stage rocks– Laupahoehoe Member, ? to 4 k.y.a– buries most of the shield stage rocks– mostly hawaiite– eruptions restricted to upper slopes of the volcano– most eruptions also formed large cinder cones– form a steep-sided “cap” on the surface of the old shield

volcano

• Had ice-age glaciers on its summit

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grooves cut by the motion of glaciers

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Hualalai Volcano• end of Subaerial Shield Stage/start of Postshield Stage

– Hualalai Member, 13 k.y.a. to present (1801 A.D.)

– alkalic basalts, a few hawaiites, and a trachyte• no tholeiitic rocks are exposed at the surface!

– Lavas commonly contain pieces of country rocks called xenoliths• many are highly crystalline, phaneritic rocks

– represent pieces of an older, solidified magma chamber

– gabbro (plagioclase and pyroxene) and peridotites (mostly olivine and pyroxene)

• Pu‘u Wa‘awa‘a– a trachyte pumice cone; also contains obsidian

– produced a very thick lava flow

– produced from an isolated magma chamber?

• Since this volcano has been active at the same time as Mauna Loa, its lava flows are interbedded with Mauna Loa lava flows

Page 24: Geology of the Big Island of Hawai‘i

Pu‘u Wa‘awa‘a

trachyte lava flow

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Mauna Loa Volcano• Largest volcano on earth

• has a caldera and two main rift zones

• normal faulting, especially along southwest rift zone

• giant submarine landslides off its southwestern flank

• only has Subaerial Shield Stage rocks exposed– all rocks are tholeiitic basalts

– Ninole Member, ~540 k.y.a.• oldest exposed rocks on the island of Hawai‘i

• may represent an extinct earlier volcano or an early stage of Mauna Loa

• named for the Ninole Hills, former ridges between amphitheater-headed valleys that have been overrun by later Mauna Loa eruptions

– Kahuku Member (unknown age)• lavas that bury the Ninole Member

• separated from younger lavas by an erosional surface

– Ka‘u Member, 300 k.y.a. to present• produced by current eruptive activity

• covers the surface of most of the volcano

– may be nearing the end of main shield-building activity since it has less

frequent eruptions than Kilauea

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fault scarp

fault scarp

Nīnole Hills

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Mauna KeaMauna Loa

Kīlauea

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Ninole Hills

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Kealakeua Bay

fault scarp

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South Point

fault scarp

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Kilauea Volcano• Most active volcano on earth

– has been continuously erupting since 1983 from vents on the east rift zone

• has a caldera and two main rift zones– caldera bounded by normal fault scarps

– faulting produces benches in the caldera walls

– rift zones have small lava shields, spatter cones, and cinder cones

• slumping of southern (seaward) flank produces normal faulting– results from expansion of rift zones due to dike injection

– seaward flank has dropped more than 600 meters

– can produce large earthquakes and tsunamis

• only has Subaerial Shield Stage rocks exposed– all rocks are tholeiitic basalts

– Hilina Member, 100 to 31 k.y.a

– Pahala Ash, ~31 k.y.a.• contains Pele’s tears and Pele’s hair

– Puna Member, 30 k.y.a. to present

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fault scarps

motion of south flank

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Mauna Loa

Kilauea Caldera

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Kilauea Caldera

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fumaroles in Kilauea Caldera

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Southwest Rift Zone

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Southwest Rift Zone

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Current Eruptive Activity

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lava flows

faultscarps

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