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Gardner Pinnacles

The Gardner Pinnacles (Hawaiian: Pūhāhonu) are two barren rock outcrops surrounded by a reef and located in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands at 24°59′56″N 167°59′58″W / 24.99889°N 167.99944°W / 24.99889; -167.99944.

The guano-coated Gardner Pinnacles.
Map showing the location of the Gardner Pinnacles in the Hawaiian island chain.
Map of the Gardner Pinnacles

The Pūhāhonu volcano responsible for the pinnacles is 511 nautical miles (946 km; 588 mi) northwest of Honolulu and 108 miles (94 nmi; 174 km) from French Frigate Shoals. The total area of the two small islets—remnants of an ancient volcano that is the world's largest shield volcano—is 5.939 acres (24,030 m2).[1] The highest peak is 170 feet (52 meters)[2][a]. The surrounding reef has an area in excess of 1,904 square kilometres (470,000 acres; 735 sq mi).[3]

The Gardner Pinnacles were discovered and named in 1820 by the whaling ship Maro.[4] The island may be the last remnant of one of the largest volcanoes on Earth.[5] It holds the record for the largest and hottest shield volcano.[2][b]

History edit

 
A drawing of the Gardner Pinnacles in 1909

The Gardner Pinnacles were first discovered on June 2, 1820, by the American whaler Maro, commanded by Captain Joseph Allen.[4]

In 1859, the position of the Gardner Pinnacles was determined by the survey schooner USS Fenimore Cooper.[6]

The Gardner Pinnacles are home to the Giant Opihi (Cellana talcosa), Hawaiian Limpet known as the ‘opihi ko‘ele, which is not found anywhere else in the world outside the Hawaiian Islands.[3] Numerous insects live on the island.[3][7]

In 1903 the Gardner Pinnacles became a part of the Hawaiian Islands Bird Reservation.[6] In 1940 it became a part of the Hawaiian Island's National Wildlife Refuge.[8] In the 21 century it is part of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument wildlife refuge.[2][a]

The Gardner Pinnacles were used as an emergency helicopter landing spot for the Hawaiian HIRAN project, an effort to determine the locations of area islands with great precision for navigational purposes.[9] In the Hawaiian Archipelago, adjacent islands/reefs are French Frigate Shoals to the southeast, and Maro Reef to the northwest.

Geology edit

 
Gardner Pinnacles
 
Gardner

The island is made up of basalt rock,[6] which comes from lava erupted between 14 to 12 million years ago.[2][c] The rock is dark grey and dense,[6] and has a high forsterite content implying the magma source was at 1,703 ± 56 °C (3,097 ± 101 °F).[2][d]

According to a 2020 report in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Pūhāhonu contains approximately 150,000 cubic kilometres (36,000 cu mi) of rock, based on a 2014 sonar survey.[2][e] This would make it Earth's largest single volcano. Only about one-third of that volume is exposed above the sea floor while the rest is buried beneath a ring of debris, broken coral, and other material that has eroded from the peak. By comparison, from sea floor to peak, Mauna Kea, on Hawaii's Big Island, is the tallest shield volcano on Earth, but it is nowhere near as massive as Pūhāhonu. Another volcano on the Big Island is Mauna Loa; a 2013 study estimates Mauna Loa's volume at 83,000 cubic kilometres (20,000 cu mi) which is believed to be an overestimate.[2][e] Pūhāhonu is so heavy, researchers note, that it has caused Earth's crust nearby—and thus the volcano itself—to sink hundreds of meters over millions of years.[10] The Puhahonu volcano (Gardner) would be twice as big as Mauna Loa's based on that research.[5] [f]

The Pūhāhonu and West Pūhāhonu volcanoes result from the Hawaii hotspot which is feed by the Hawaiian plume which had a major magmatic flux pulse at the time.[2][c] A longer magmatic flux pulse produced the Hawaiian Islands.[2][c] The five seamounts of the Naifeh Chain to the north of Pūhāhonu have a completely different tectonic origin, and are older (Late Cretaceous).[12]. At one time they were hypothesised to be related to the Pūhāhonu volcano because of arch volcanism, which can not be the case, given the newly determined age difference.[12]

Ecology edit

The island has one plant known to grow on it, the succulent sea purslane.[13] However, there are over a dozen species of bird observed here, many nesting.[13] There is also a variety of insect species on the island.[13]

In the surrounding waters there is variety of sealife, which is noted as habitat for a limpet, the giant ophi which lives in tidal areas of the rocky island.[13] There are many species of fish and coral life in the nearby waters.[13]

The large numbers of birds have coated many surfaces of the island in guano, giving it a whitish appearance.[6]

Some of the fish species in the nearby waters include red lip parrotfish, doublebar goatfish, and reef triggerfish.[14]

Name edit

The name Gardner comes from its discovery in 1820, when the Captain Joseph Allen of the ship Maro named it Gardner's Island.[13] They also discovered Maro Reef, which is named for that sailing ship.[15]

It has sometimes been called Gardner Rock or Gardner Island, besides the Gardner Pinnacles.[16]

The Hawaiian name, Pūhāhonu, means 'turtle surfacing for air', from pūhā 'to breathe at the surface' and honu 'turtle'.[17]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Garcia et. al. 2020: 1. Introduction 
  2. ^ Garcia et. al. 2020: Abstract 
  3. ^ a b c Garcia et. al. 2020: Conclusion 
  4. ^ Garcia et. al. 2020: 4.3. What caused Pūhāhonu's large volume? 
  5. ^ a b Garcia et. al. 2020: 4.2. How massive is Pūhāhonu? 
  6. ^ The Tamu Massif, a 4-kilometer-tall volcanic feature the size of the British Isles on the sea floor east of Japan, contains almost 7 million cubic kilometers of material and was once thought to be the world's largest shield volcano. But Tamu Massif is now believed to have formed along a mid-ocean ridge rather than over a single source of magma. That makes Pūhāhonu the largest known shield volcano on Earth.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ Giuliani-Hoffman, Francesca. "The largest volcano in the world sits beneath two small rocky peaks in Hawaii". CNN. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Garcia, Michael O.; Tree, Jonathan P.; Wessel, Paul; Smith, John R. (July 15, 2020). "Pūhāhonu: Earth's biggest and hottest shield volcano". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 542: 116296. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116296. ISSN 0012-821X.
  3. ^ a b c Gardner Pinnacles - Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge. U.S Fish and Wildlife Service. December 14, 2016
  4. ^ a b Mark J. Rauzon (2001). Isles of Refuge: Wildlife and History of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 95–. ISBN 978-0-8248-2330-6.
  5. ^ a b "SOEST researchers reveal largest and hottest shield volcano on Earth".
  6. ^ a b c d e Clapp, Roger B. (1972). "The natural history of Gardner Pinnacles, Northwestern Hawaiian Islands". Atoll Research Bulletin. Smithsonian Institution. 163: 1–25. doi:10.5479/si.00775630.163.1. ISSN 0077-5630. OCLC 887851.
  7. ^ Gardner Pinnacles (Pūhāhonu) Papahānaumokuākea (Northwestern Hawaiian Islands) Marine National Monument
  8. ^ "RogerClapp.pdf".
  9. ^ King, Warren B. (March 1973). "Conservation Status of Birds of Central Pacific Islands". The Wilson Bulletin. Wilson Ornithological Society. 85 (1): 89–103. JSTOR 4160286.
  10. ^ Perkins, Sid (May 12, 2020). "World's biggest volcano is barely visible". www.science.org. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
  11. ^ World’s biggest volcano is barely visible, Science Magazine, May. 12, 2020. doi:10.1126/science.abc7615
  12. ^ a b Sotomayor, A; Balbas, A; Konrad, K; Koppers, AA; Konter, JG; Wanless, VD; Hourigan, TF; Kelley, C; Raineault, N (2023). "New insights into the age and origin of two small Cretaceous seamount chains proximal to the Northwestern Hawaiian Ridge". Geosphere. 19 (2): 383–405. doi:10.1130/GES02580.1.
  13. ^ a b c d e f "Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument". www.papahanaumokuakea.gov.
  14. ^ "Gardner Pinnacles - Hawaiian Islands - U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service".
  15. ^ "Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument". www.papahanaumokuakea.gov.
  16. ^ "Log of the Kaalokai". 1909.
  17. ^ "Nā Puke Wehewehe ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi". wehewehe.org.

External links edit

  • Gardner Pinnacles Islands of the Hawaiian Chain
  • Gardner Pinnacles Page ~ Bishop Museum
  • Quick Facts on the Gardner Pinnacles – from the PBS Ocean Adventures
  • Gardner Pinnacles (Pūhāhonu)

gardner, pinnacles, hawaiian, pūhāhonu, barren, rock, outcrops, surrounded, reef, located, northwestern, hawaiian, islands, 99889, 99944, 99889, 99944, guano, coated, showing, location, hawaiian, island, chain, pūhāhonu, volcano, responsible, pinnacles, nautic. The Gardner Pinnacles Hawaiian Puhahonu are two barren rock outcrops surrounded by a reef and located in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands at 24 59 56 N 167 59 58 W 24 99889 N 167 99944 W 24 99889 167 99944 The guano coated Gardner Pinnacles Map showing the location of the Gardner Pinnacles in the Hawaiian island chain Map of the Gardner PinnaclesThe Puhahonu volcano responsible for the pinnacles is 511 nautical miles 946 km 588 mi northwest of Honolulu and 108 miles 94 nmi 174 km from French Frigate Shoals The total area of the two small islets remnants of an ancient volcano that is the world s largest shield volcano is 5 939 acres 24 030 m2 1 The highest peak is 170 feet 52 meters 2 a The surrounding reef has an area in excess of 1 904 square kilometres 470 000 acres 735 sq mi 3 The Gardner Pinnacles were discovered and named in 1820 by the whaling ship Maro 4 The island may be the last remnant of one of the largest volcanoes on Earth 5 It holds the record for the largest and hottest shield volcano 2 b Contents 1 History 2 Geology 3 Ecology 4 Name 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp A drawing of the Gardner Pinnacles in 1909The Gardner Pinnacles were first discovered on June 2 1820 by the American whaler Maro commanded by Captain Joseph Allen 4 In 1859 the position of the Gardner Pinnacles was determined by the survey schooner USS Fenimore Cooper 6 The Gardner Pinnacles are home to the Giant Opihi Cellana talcosa Hawaiian Limpet known as the opihi ko ele which is not found anywhere else in the world outside the Hawaiian Islands 3 Numerous insects live on the island 3 7 In 1903 the Gardner Pinnacles became a part of the Hawaiian Islands Bird Reservation 6 In 1940 it became a part of the Hawaiian Island s National Wildlife Refuge 8 In the 21 century it is part of Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument wildlife refuge 2 a The Gardner Pinnacles were used as an emergency helicopter landing spot for the Hawaiian HIRAN project an effort to determine the locations of area islands with great precision for navigational purposes 9 In the Hawaiian Archipelago adjacent islands reefs are French Frigate Shoals to the southeast and Maro Reef to the northwest Geology edit nbsp Gardner Pinnacles nbsp GardnerThe island is made up of basalt rock 6 which comes from lava erupted between 14 to 12 million years ago 2 c The rock is dark grey and dense 6 and has a high forsterite content implying the magma source was at 1 703 56 C 3 097 101 F 2 d According to a 2020 report in Earth and Planetary Science Letters Puhahonu contains approximately 150 000 cubic kilometres 36 000 cu mi of rock based on a 2014 sonar survey 2 e This would make it Earth s largest single volcano Only about one third of that volume is exposed above the sea floor while the rest is buried beneath a ring of debris broken coral and other material that has eroded from the peak By comparison from sea floor to peak Mauna Kea on Hawaii s Big Island is the tallest shield volcano on Earth but it is nowhere near as massive as Puhahonu Another volcano on the Big Island is Mauna Loa a 2013 study estimates Mauna Loa s volume at 83 000 cubic kilometres 20 000 cu mi which is believed to be an overestimate 2 e Puhahonu is so heavy researchers note that it has caused Earth s crust nearby and thus the volcano itself to sink hundreds of meters over millions of years 10 The Puhahonu volcano Gardner would be twice as big as Mauna Loa s based on that research 5 f The Puhahonu and West Puhahonu volcanoes result from the Hawaii hotspot which is feed by the Hawaiian plume which had a major magmatic flux pulse at the time 2 c A longer magmatic flux pulse produced the Hawaiian Islands 2 c The five seamounts of the Naifeh Chain to the north of Puhahonu have a completely different tectonic origin and are older Late Cretaceous 12 At one time they were hypothesised to be related to the Puhahonu volcano because of arch volcanism which can not be the case given the newly determined age difference 12 Ecology editThe island has one plant known to grow on it the succulent sea purslane 13 However there are over a dozen species of bird observed here many nesting 13 There is also a variety of insect species on the island 13 In the surrounding waters there is variety of sealife which is noted as habitat for a limpet the giant ophi which lives in tidal areas of the rocky island 13 There are many species of fish and coral life in the nearby waters 13 The large numbers of birds have coated many surfaces of the island in guano giving it a whitish appearance 6 Some of the fish species in the nearby waters include red lip parrotfish doublebar goatfish and reef triggerfish 14 Name editThe name Gardner comes from its discovery in 1820 when the Captain Joseph Allen of the ship Maro named it Gardner s Island 13 They also discovered Maro Reef which is named for that sailing ship 15 It has sometimes been called Gardner Rock or Gardner Island besides the Gardner Pinnacles 16 The Hawaiian name Puhahonu means turtle surfacing for air from puha to breathe at the surface and honu turtle 17 See also editList of volcanoes in the Hawaiian Emperor seamount chain Nikumaroro aka Gardner Island Notes edit a b Garcia et al 2020 1 Introduction Garcia et al 2020 Abstract a b c Garcia et al 2020 Conclusion Garcia et al 2020 4 3 What caused Puhahonu s large volume a b Garcia et al 2020 4 2 How massive is Puhahonu The Tamu Massif a 4 kilometer tall volcanic feature the size of the British Isles on the sea floor east of Japan contains almost 7 million cubic kilometers of material and was once thought to be the world s largest shield volcano But Tamu Massif is now believed to have formed along a mid ocean ridge rather than over a single source of magma That makes Puhahonu the largest known shield volcano on Earth 11 References edit Giuliani Hoffman Francesca The largest volcano in the world sits beneath two small rocky peaks in Hawaii CNN Retrieved May 26 2020 a b c d e f g h i Garcia Michael O Tree Jonathan P Wessel Paul Smith John R July 15 2020 Puhahonu Earth s biggest and hottest shield volcano Earth and Planetary Science Letters 542 116296 doi 10 1016 j epsl 2020 116296 ISSN 0012 821X a b c Gardner Pinnacles Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge U S Fish and Wildlife Service December 14 2016 a b Mark J Rauzon 2001 Isles of Refuge Wildlife and History of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands University of Hawaii Press pp 95 ISBN 978 0 8248 2330 6 a b SOEST researchers reveal largest and hottest shield volcano on Earth a b c d e Clapp Roger B 1972 The natural history of Gardner Pinnacles Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Atoll Research Bulletin Smithsonian Institution 163 1 25 doi 10 5479 si 00775630 163 1 ISSN 0077 5630 OCLC 887851 Gardner Pinnacles Puhahonu Papahanaumokuakea Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Marine National Monument RogerClapp pdf King Warren B March 1973 Conservation Status of Birds of Central Pacific Islands The Wilson Bulletin Wilson Ornithological Society 85 1 89 103 JSTOR 4160286 Perkins Sid May 12 2020 World s biggest volcano is barely visible www science org Retrieved May 5 2022 World s biggest volcano is barely visible Science Magazine May 12 2020 doi 10 1126 science abc7615 a b Sotomayor A Balbas A Konrad K Koppers AA Konter JG Wanless VD Hourigan TF Kelley C Raineault N 2023 New insights into the age and origin of two small Cretaceous seamount chains proximal to the Northwestern Hawaiian Ridge Geosphere 19 2 383 405 doi 10 1130 GES02580 1 a b c d e f Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument www papahanaumokuakea gov Gardner Pinnacles Hawaiian Islands U S Fish and Wildlife Service Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument www papahanaumokuakea gov Log of the Kaalokai 1909 Na Puke Wehewehe ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi wehewehe org External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gardner Pinnacles Gardner Pinnacles Islands of the Hawaiian Chain Gardner Pinnacles Page Bishop Museum Quick Facts on the Gardner Pinnacles from the PBS Ocean Adventures Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument Information Management System Gardner Pinnacles Puhahonu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gardner Pinnacles amp oldid 1190449573, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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