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Honolulu Volcanics

The Honolulu Volcanics are a group of volcanoes which form a volcanic field on the island of Oʻahu, Hawaiʻi, more specifically in that island's southeastern sector and in the city of Honolulu from Pearl Harbor to the Mokapu Peninsula. It is part of the rejuvenated stage of Hawaiian volcanic activity, which occurred after the main stage of volcanic activity that on Oʻahu built the Koʻolau volcano. These volcanoes formed through dominantly explosive eruptions and gave rise to cinder cones, lava flows, tuff cones and volcanic islands. Among these are well known landmarks such as Diamond Head and Punchbowl Crater.

Honolulu Volcanics
Topography of southeastern Oʻahu
Highest point
Coordinates21°22′N 157°48′W / 21.37°N 157.8°W / 21.37; -157.8[1]
Geography
Honolulu Volcanics

Volcanic activity began less than one million years ago and occurred at between 40 and 30 separate volcanic vents, some of which are submarine. Sea level varied during the activity of the volcanic field, and some volcanic eruptions have been dated through correlation with individual sea level fluctuations. The field erupted various kinds of lavas of mostly basaltic type with a high content of xenoliths. During eruptions, ascending magma often underwent interactions with water and thus caused steam explosions and the formation of particular volcanic structures such as tuff cones. The last eruption took place 35,000 or 76,000 years ago and future hazardous eruptions are possible.

Geography and geomorphology edit

The Honolulu Volcanics are a series of volcanoes in the southeastern sector of Oʻahu[2] and includes dikes, lava flows, spatter cones,[3] tephra deposits,[4] tuff cones,[3] and mesas where the surrounding terrain has been eroded away.[5] Vents span the area southeast of a line between Mokapu Peninsula and Pearl Harbor, and extend from the ridges of Koʻolau volcano to below sea level and to the coast plain of southern Oʻahu.[6]

The system takes its name from Honolulu, the capital of Hawaiʻi,[7] as craters are scattered in and around the city.[8] The volcanic system includes well-known landmarks of Honolulu such as Diamond Head, Koko Head, Punchbowl Crater,[3] Rabbit Island, Tantalus,[9] Hanauma Bay (notable as a snorkeling site)[10] and the Mokapu Peninsula,[11] which is the location of Marine Corps Base Hawaiʻi.[12] The United States military has made use of some of the volcanic islands that were formed by the Honolulu Volcanics.[13] The Koko area is designated as the Koko Head Regional Park[14] and Hanauma Bay is also a state park.[15] Parts of this system are among the best known volcanic vents of Hawaiʻi.[16]

About 30–40 vents have been identified.[17] Most cinder cones on Oʻahu are quite large, over 76 metres (250 ft) high and up to 0.80 kilometres (0.5 mi) wide.[18] Some of the lava flows filled deep valleys cut into the older Koʻolau volcano[19] and displaced streams that previously ran through these valleys; for example, water passing over a lava flow in Kamanaiki Valley forms a waterfall.[20] Together with sediments coming down from the mountains and coral reef growth, the deposits of the Honolulu Volcanics have formed the coastal plain on which the city of Honolulu and military installations are built.[21]

The vents of the Honolulu Volcanics follow northeastward-trending[6] alignments that are at right angles to the rift zone of the Koʻolau volcano.[22] From northwest to southeast these are the Haʻikū Rift, the Tantalus Rift, the Kaimukī/Kaʻau Rift and the Koko Head/Koko Rift,[23][24] but each rift has had eruptions at different times and with different compositions.[25] It is not clear whether these alignments are in any way related to the structure of the previous Koʻolau volcano, instead of being controlled by the crust of the Pacific Ocean,[6] but the trends along the Koko and Tantalus Rifts are parallel to that of the flexural arch[a] of Hawaiʻi Island.[27] There is also a hypothetical "Diamond Head fault" that may be associated with earthquakes on Oahu that occurred in 1948, 1951 and 1961–1981, but it is not parallel to these alignments and its very existence is questionable.[28]

Submarine vents are also known,[29] including a 300-metre (980 ft) high solitary cone with two ridges off northeast Oʻahu, which is covered by pillow lavas and volcaniclastic sediments.[30] At least five cones[31] are found off the southwestern extension of the Koko Rift[32] where they are situated on a southwestward extending ridge. Another set of submarine vents is found south of Diamond Head.[33] It was once proposed that some seamounts (underwater mountains) off northeastern Oʻahu such as Tuscaloosa Seamount are related to the volcanic series;[34] today however they are considered to be fragments of the giant Nuʻuanu Slide off northeastern Oʻahu.[35]

Description of individual volcanoes edit

Most of the present-day shoreline of Hawaiʻi Kai was formed by Honolulu Volcanics;[36] the Kuapā Pond is a leftover lake between the new shoreline and the old shoreline of the Koʻolau volcano.[37] The volcanic vents there include Koko Head, the Hanauma Bay craters, Kahauloa crater bay, a wave-eroded cone, Koko Crater and Kalama cinder cone;[36] Koko Head cones are heavily eroded, and the sea has broken into one of the cones, exposing its structure in outcrops.[38] Koko Head is the largest cone of the Honolulu Volcanics[39] and the crater of Koko Crater is about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) wide.[40] Hanauma Bay close to Kalanianaʻole Highway is located 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) east of Honolulu[41] and is a 0.4 by 0.8 kilometres (0.25 mi × 0.50 mi) large, 18 metres (59 ft) deep[42] compound crater[43]/tuff cone[44] with several associated dykes and lava flows-[45] It was breached by the sea[44] and coral reefs grow within it.[46] Together with Kahauloa and Kalama all these vents form the Koko Rift.[29] Farther northeast lie the Kaupō lava flow and the islands of Kāohikaipu and Mānana;[47] all these except Mānana are also in the Koko Rift.[48][49] This 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) long rift includes at least 12 separate volcanic vents[25] and its vents appear to have formed in a single eruption.[50]

Diamond Head is a 1,700-metre (5,600 ft) (rim-to-rim) wide[40] typical tuff cone with a wide and not overly deep crater that forms a prominent promontory east of Honolulu.[38] Inland from Diamond Head lie the Kaimukī and Mauʻumae cones,[51] which appear to come from a shared fissure.[38] Mauʻumae features a lava flow[52] and Kaimukī is an unusual lava cone with a summit crater.[53] Its slopes are gentle and lava ponded against topographical obstacles.[54] The Kaimukī and Kaʻau cinder cones together with Mauʻumae and Diamond Head form the Kaʻau or Kaimukī rift zone;[55] the Kaʻau crater lies close to the crest of the Koʻolau Range and is filled by a swamp that drains into Waimao stream.[56] Punchbowl Crater rises north of[57] and at the centre of Honolulu and is a good outlook to the city and its surroundings.[7]

The Mokapu peninsula was formed by Honolulu Volcanics and includes the three volcanic vents of Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa, Pyramid Rock and Ulapaʻu Head; additional vents form islets off the peninsula,[58] such as Moku Manu[59] and Mōkōlea Rock. Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa is a cinder cone in the middle of the peninsula,[60] Pyramid Rock at the northwestern tip[61] is deeply eroded and probably the oldest vent in the peninsula, and Ulapaʻu Head is a crater that was breached by the sea[60] and of which only a crescent-like western part remains.[62]

Salt Lake Crater[63] contains a salt lake and is located east from Pearl Harbor;[64] the salt lake formed when salty groundwater seeped into the crater and was concentrated by evaporation.[65] A cluster of additional older vents known as ʻĀliamanu, Makalapa, ʻĀliamanu School Cone, Moanalua Cone, ʻĀkulikuli Vent and Wiliki Cone are associated with Salt Lake Crater.[66] The Salt Lake Tuff is associated with these craters and covers an area of at least 13 square kilometres (5 sq mi);[67] Honolulu International Airport and Hickham Air Force Base lie south and southwest from the vents respectively.[68] Some of these vents have been identified as maars.[69]

Geology edit

The Honolulu Volcanics developed on the 2.3 million year old Koʻolau Volcanic Series,[2] which forms the core of eastern Oahu and extends underwater far from the shore.[3] Like other Hawaiian volcanoes Koʻolau is a shield volcano that grew through lava flows erupted from a rift system with a central caldera, although a large section of the volcano has sunk below sea level. This volcano constitutes the tholeiitic stage of Hawaiian volcanism,[70] and developed possibly during Miocene to Pleistocene time.[41] Before Koʻolau volcano was active, between 3.5 and 2.74 million years ago, Waiʻanae volcano formed the western part of Oʻahu.[71] Koʻolau volcano appears to be unrelated to the Honolulu Volcanics,[6] which are considered to be a separate volcanic system;[58] sometimes the "Kokohead Volcanics" are split off from the Honolulu Volcanics.[72]

The Honolulu Volcanics constitute a late stage of volcanism[70] which in Hawaiʻi is known as the rejuvenated stage[73] and the third stage of a typical Hawaiian volcano.[19] They have a much smaller volume than the Koʻolau volcano[22] even though their lava flows are usually thicker;[74] the unconformity that separates the Honolulu Volcanics from the Koʻolau Volcanic Series was already recognized in the 19th century.[75]

As Hawaiian volcanoes grow, they start to sink under their weight. As volcanism moves along the Hawaiian chain, the Hawaiian Arch moves behind the volcanism at a distance of several hundred kilometres, and appears to have passed under Oahu in geologically recent times. The tectonic effect of the Hawaiian Arch passing under the island may be responsible for the onset of Honolulu Volcanics volcanism, as well as of the Kōloa Volcanics on Kauaʻi and perhaps for future volcanism on Maui or Molokaʻi,[76] but also for ongoing uplift on Oʻahu.[77] Other proposed mechanisms are a conductive heating of the lithosphere or ongoing upwelling in the mantle plume.[78] There is evidence that a fall in sea level at the beginning of the last ice age triggered the last eruptions.[79]

The terrain that the volcanoes developed on includes both old volcanic rocks of the Koʻolau volcano, sediments of the coastal plains,[4] and soils.[68] Some Honolulu Volcanics have grown on coral deposits,[37] Koko Head developed on limestone for example,[80] and coral reef development was widespread during the activity of the Honolulu Volcanics.[81] The Honolulu Volcanics are not associated with either aeromagnetic[72] or gravimetric anomalies; only Salt Lake Crater has an associated gravity anomaly.[82] There is rejuvenated volcanism on Waiʻanae volcano also, but it appears to be older than the Honolulu Volcanics.[83]

Composition edit

The petrology of the Honolulu Volcanics is well studied.[84] The volcanic rocks of the Honolulu Volcanics are diverse; they include alkali basalts, melilite and nepheline basalts, basanites,[3] melilite,[63] nephelinite[85] and websterite,[63] and form an alkaline[81]-nephelinite suite.[2] The variations in composition reflect distinct proportions of melts produced from parent rocks.[86] Phenocrysts include augite, labradorite, olivine[49] and plagioclase;[87] additionally spinels are found in the rocks.[63] Xenoliths of amphibole, calcite, clinopyroxene, dunite, garnet, garnet peridotite, orthopyroxene, phlogopite, garnet pyroxenite, lherzolite and spinel have been described.[81][88][2] The most common ones are dunite, garnet containing rocks and lherzolite[89] and the relative prevalence of the various xenoliths is a function of the position of their source vent relative to the Koʻolau caldera. Their formation was influenced by mantle rocks left over from the Koʻolau volcano.[90]

Coral fragments have been found in Koko and Salt Lake rocks,[2] and metamorphic rocks included in the volcanics may be part of the basement that the magmas of the volcanoes traversed.[3] Calcite – which in the form of crystals gives Diamond Head its name[81] – in the volcanic rocks may come from coral reefs, groundwater or even from the magma itself;[2] isotope ratios of the rocks indicate that groundwater carbonates are the most important source, however.[91]

In Punchbowl Crater, where the rocks have been quarried, they have a brown to yellow colour.[57] Cinders have red-black colours which can grade to yellow when they are hydrothermally altered, due to the formation of the glassy rock palagonite.[53] Many of the erupted rocks have undergone various degrees of alteration, including the formation of zeolitic palagonite;[92] minerals included in altered rocks include analcime, aragonite, calcite, chabazite, erionite, faujasite, gonnardite, gypsum, montmorillonite, natrolite, opal, phillipsite and thomsonite.[93] In some vents, such as Diamond Head, the rocks are so heavily altered that their original composition[29] and texture can no longer be reconstructed.[94]

Origin of the rocks edit

The Honolulu Volcanics rocks originate at greater depths than the rocks from Koʻolau volcano and their composition is fairly dissimilar as well,[95] while there are substantial geochemical similarities to young volcanic rocks from East Molokaʻi, Kauaʻi and West Maui.[96] Jackson and Wright suggested that the pyroxenite may be the source rock of the magmas, with orthopyroxene-rich rocks being leftovers from the melting process;[63] strontium isotope ratios endorse this origin although none of the xenoliths appears to be entirely representative of the source melts.[97] Water- and carbon dioxide-containing volatiles may have altered the source rocks of the Honolulu Volcanics melts before these actually melted.[98] In terms of the ultimate origin of the magmas, either an origin from a mixing between MORB mantle with mantle plume rocks,[b][101] the lithosphere[73][c] or exclusively from lithospheric mantle have been proposed.[103] Research published in 2007 favoured an origin from a depleted mantle component along with a mantle plume "Kalihi" component,[104] with additional material contributed from the margins of the mantle plume.[100] Magma may have remained in the crust for months or years before erupting.[79]

Groundwater content edit

Groundwater contained in Honolulu Volcanics rocks, while not voluminous, is important in some areas such as Maunawili Valley.[105] Moreover, impermeable tuff layers can hold groundwater in rock layers above them.[53] However, Koʻolau volcanic rocks contain most of the groundwater on Oʻahu,[106] and most Honolulu Volcanics have little significance.[74] Some groundwater in Honolulu Volcanics rocks is saline, and has been used both as a water source for a sea-life park at Makapuʻu and for the discharge of salty wastewaters.[105]

Eruption history edit

Chronology edit

The activity of the Honolulu Volcanics began less than one million years ago[107] during the late Pleistocene and Holocene,[2] after volcanic activity at Koʻolau had ceased and the volcano been substantially eroded. The first eruptions occurred within the Koʻolau caldera and the youngest in the far southeastern part of Oʻahu, coinciding with the Koko Rift.[22] There is otherwise little evidence for a spatial pattern in the volcanic activity, with each rift having eruptions widely spaced in time.[108] The lava flows from Honolulu Volcanics have been used to construct a history of variations of Earth's magnetic field.[109]

Eruptions of the Honolulu Volcanics have been correlated to shorelines[110] generated by sea level variations, which have left both drowned and emergent platforms and terraces on Oʻahu.[17] Some volcanoes formed when sea level was lower than today and thus part of their structures are now submerged, others formed when it was higher and grew on reefs.[111] These sea level variations are a function of glacial-interglacial changes, with higher sea levels associated with interglacials[112] when polar glaciers expand and retreat.[110] Thus four stages of volcanic activity have been defined, a first during the Kahipa highstand, a second during the Kaʻena and Lāʻie highstands,[113] a third during the Waipiʻo and Waimānalo highstands and a fourth after the Waimānalo highstand.[114] In turn, the Waimānalo stage was correlated to the last interglacial[115]/Sangamonian interstadial[114] and the Kaʻena highstand to an interglacial 600,000 ± 100,000 years ago.[116]

First dating efforts yielded ages of Pleistocene-Holocene based on sea level variations,[22] while potassium-argon dating has yielded ages ranging between 800,000 and 60,000 years old.[73] However, the presence of excess radiogenic argon[107] due to the xenoliths[117] makes dates obtained by potassium-argon dating unreliable[107] and dates older than 800,000 years are especially questionable.[84] Argon-argon dating has been applied to submarine vents of the Honolulu Volcanics and has yielded ages of 700,000 to 400,000 years for submarine vents northeast of Oʻahu[118] while the southwestern submarine vents have ages clustering around 140,000 ± 50,000 years,[119] in line with the ages of the Koko rift.[26]

Volcanic activity occurred in two pulses, one between 800,000 and 250,000 years ago and the other in the last 120,000 years, with a hiatus in between the two pulses.[120] Sometimes the vents of the Sugar Loaf, Tantalus Peak and Koko Rift area are classified separately from the other vents of the Honolulu Volcanics as they are usually less than 100,000 years old.[121] Volcanic eruptions in the Koko Rift occurred between 100,000 and 60,000 years ago;[44] it is not clear whether Koko Rift or Tantalus Rift erupted last, as ages of 35,000 and 85,000 years before present have been obtained on the Koko Rift while the Tantalus Rift has yielded ages of 76,000 ± 1,000 years ago,[122] and the two rifts are clearly unrelated to each other.[123] The average recurrence interval for eruptions in the Honolulu Volcanics is about 35,000 years assuming that the younger ages for the Koko Rift are correct.[122]

Eruption characteristics edit

Many eruptions were highly explosive, probably due to the magma being rich in gases, threw tephra high into the air,[6] and ripped pre-existent volcanic rock and limestone out.[124] When the rising magma intercepted water—especially close to the coast—steam explosions ensued which threw up rock debris including older rocks such as coral fragments. Lava flows were erupted mainly during the late stage of the eruption and were typically of small dimensions; the longest flow is 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) long and the largest one at Kaimukī forms a 4 square kilometres (1.5 sq mi) lava shield[125] or lava dome.[81] Cinder cones form from the fallout of volcanic ejecta material, which is variously described as cinder, lava bombs, pumice and spatter and forms layered deposits.[53] Tuff cones in addition can also contain non-magmatic ejecta.[54] Many of these eruptions, especially that of Diamond Head, probably only lasted for a short time such as a few hours, as has been observed in similar eruptions during historical time.[126]

The field has also seen many Surtseyan or phreatomagmatic eruptions, especially at nearshore vents,[84] when ascending magma encountered water, such as at Mānana Island, Koko and Punchbowl; these eruptions were explosive[127] and they are the best exposed site of Surtseyan activity in the United States.[128] Some formed small islands when they emerged, and one vent may now be buried beneath coral deposits.[129] At Koko Crater and Diamond Head, the amount of water interacting with the developing volcano varied over the course of the eruption, as more water entered the vent when the eruption enlarged it.[130]

Volcanic rocks of Honolulu Volcanics include agglomerates, breccia, breccia-tuffs, scoria bombs and tuffs.[111] Tephra takes the form of both lapilli and volcanic ash[92] and some eruptions were followed by lahars when volcanic ash was swept up by streams; one such deposit is found in Pālolo Valley.[131] During eruptions, trade winds blew material from the vent;[80] this wind-driven material transport is responsible for the frequently asymmetric shape of the volcanoes[132] such as at Diamond Head where the southeastern rim is the highest part of the crater rim.[15]

Drill cores in Hanauma Bay have found ash layers;[133] a black ash known as "black sand" is widespread across Honolulu and originated in volcanic eruptions of the Honolulu Volcanics,[134] and ash layers cover coral reef deposis both onshore and offshore as far as ʻEwa Beach.[135] Ash from the Salt Lake Craters was transported by winds to Pearl Harbor and is considered to be responsible for the formation of the bay by closing off its access to the sea.[136]

Activity at specific vents:

  • At Diamond Head, eruptions commenced underwater and first deposited white rocks formed mostly by reworked corals.[137] Proper tuff layers were emplaced on top of this unit.[138]
  • The formation of Kaʻau Crater was also accompanied by phreatic activity that deposited alluvial tuffs.[139] Some eruptions – such as those of the Kaʻau, Mōkōlea and Training School vents – may have occurred as one sequence over a 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) long line.[120]
  • Intense explosive eruptions took place when magma erupted underwater, forming Hanauma Bay.[14] The eruption took place in several stages; pauses between these stages lasted no more than a few months,[140] and erosion was already underway during the eruption.[141] Hanauma Bay was colonized by coral reefs after it formed, and marine benches developed within the bay;[41] the exact origin of these benches is often not clear.[42] The eruption of Kahauloa was synchronous to that of Hanauma Bay.[141]
  • Koko Head was formed by the Koko Tuff. Later explosion craters, such as Hanauma Bay, developed within Koko Head.[41] Koko Crater was also the source of an ash layer that covers the surrounding terrain,[142] and of pyroclastic density flows.[143] After Koko Head had formed, a second volcanic explosion generated another crater on its eastern foot and filled gullies which had been carved into Koko Head by erosion.[144]
  • Punchbowl Crater formed from the fallout of an eruption column. Material from the column fell onto the coral plain where the vent was located, forming the crater.[132]
  • The formation of the Sugarloaf flow was accompanied by tephra fallout. The tephra reached over 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) thickness 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) away in what is now downtown Honolulu,[75] landing on a limestone 123,000 ± 2,000 years old.[145] The flow was erupted on a ridge, west from the Manoa Valley.[146] It is a 15 metres (49 ft) thick ʻaʻā flow, an unusual trait given its composition which resembles that of Nyiragongo volcano which produces fast flowing lava flows.[75] The eruption of the Tantalus vent was apparently synchronous to that of Sugarloaf;[145] both eruptions were highly explosive due to a high volatile content of the magmas, shedding ash over a large area.[147]
  • Ulupaʻu Head crater contained a lake,[148] which was once the largest lake of Hawaiʻi with a surface area of 0.5–0.6 square kilometres (0.19–0.23 sq mi).[149] It persisted for a long time[148] during the Middle Pleistocene[150] until the sea breached the crater rim.[149] A number of bird fossils have been found in the lake deposits.[151] Rano Kau on Easter Island resembles the former Ulupaʻu Head lake.[148]

Many vents of the Honolulu Volcanics are furrowed;[62] erosion has cut gullies in the slopes of Diamond Head[38] and Punchbowl Crater.[152] Wavecut terraces formed in some volcanoes during sea level highstands;[111] it is likely that wave erosion breached Hanauma Bay, flooding it,[14] either during or after the eruption that created it.[45]

 
Erosion gullies on the flanks of Koko Crater

Youngest activity and hazards edit

The youngest eruptions of the whole field took place either 30,000[84] or 76,000 years ago,[122] making it the youngest rejuvenated volcanism in Hawaii.[123] Some of the youngest volcanics of Honolulu Volcanics were once considered 5,000 years old,[1] with an age of 7,000 years attributed to a volcanic event at Hanauma Bay[14] and another of 10,000 years to the Kaupō flow.[153] However, radiometric dating has not yielded ages younger than 31,000–43,000 years old,[1] and most age estimates of less than 30,000 years ago are misinterpreted.[121] There is no evidence in oral tradition for eruptions during historical times.[154]

Future eruptions of Honolulu Volcanics are possible,[155] but the likelihood of a new event in the next hundred or thousand years is considered to be so small as to be negligible;[156] it is probably comparable to the Kohala peninsula on Hawaiʻi, the lowest risk area of the active island.[157] Additionally, only small areas of Oʻahu are likely to be affected by an eruption.[156]

Any future eruption is likely to occur in the southeastern sector of Oʻahu and will be of small volume,[156] involving the emplacement of cinders, lava flows and mudflows[71] with characteristics similar to those of past Honolulu Volcanics eruptions:[6]

  • Tephra fall would be drawn by winds in a most likely southwestward direction, and could depending on the vent location fall over downtown Honolulu and Pearl Harbor;[158] known dangers of tephra falls are collapsing roofs, pollution of the air and of water resources, impaired visibility and damage to machinery and vegetation. Close to the vent volcanic gases and falling lava bombs would constitute additional dangers.[159] Tephra deposits can be swept away by rainfall, forming mudflows which owing to their high speed and density can be hazardous.[160]
  • Steam explosions could generate lateral blasts, which can spread to distances of 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) from vents at high speed and transport dangerous heat and debris. Such lateral blasts may have occurred when Diamond Head, Koko Head and Punchbowl formed.[159]
  • Lava flows can cause severe property damage as they can destroy structures in their way, but owing to their slowness are seldom a threat to life; additionally a lava flow would most likely be preceded by other eruptive phenomena which would drive people away from the hazard zone before a lava flow can become a threat.[161]

Geothermal power prospecting edit

The Mokapu Peninsula has been prospected for the presence of geothermal power resources, but the presence of such resources was judged to be unlikely. Short-lasting volcanism typical for Honolulu Volcanics is unlikely to leave remnant heat resources.[162] The only anomalously warm springs in the area are found within the Koʻolau caldera and are related to that volcanic system rather than the Honolulu Volcanics.[163] Some evidence of geothermal activity has been found elsewhere on Oʻahu.[164]

List of vents edit

Name Age in years before present Photo Traits of the vent; most vents include a cone and lava flows[165] Location Coordinates per Ozawa, Tagami and Garcia 2005[166]
ʻAinoni 440,000 ± 30,000[167] This vent lies 2 miles (3.2 km) southwest of Olomana Peak[168] 21°21′14″N 157°45′40″W / 21.35389°N 157.76111°W / 21.35389; -157.76111
ʻĀkulikuli 290,000 ± 70,000[167] 21°21′03″N 157°55′00″W / 21.35083°N 157.91667°W / 21.35083; -157.91667
Āliamanu Crater 250,000 ± 40,000[169] Maar[69] This vent is located between Pearl Harbor and Honolulu,[168] directly northwest from Salt Lake Crater[68] 21°21′43″N 157°54′32″W / 21.36194°N 157.90889°W / 21.36194; -157.90889
Black Point 400,000–330,000,[170] older age estimates are 290,000 and 410,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] as well as 300,000 and 480,000[122] Apparently two eruptions occurred here[172] Cone[69] and lava flow just south of Diamond Head.[173] Southeast of Diamond Head[168] 21°15′34.5″N 157°47′47″W / 21.259583°N 157.79639°W / 21.259583; -157.79639
Castle 410,000 ± 50,000,[167] older age estimates are > 800,000 years old[55] or 850,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] Lava flow at the foot of the Nuanuʻu cliffs.[55] 4.8 kilometres (3 mi) east of Kailua[168] 21°24′00″N 157°46′09″W / 21.40000°N 157.76917°W / 21.40000; -157.76917
Diamond Head 520,000–350,000[174] or 360,000 ± 70,000[119]   Southeast of Honolulu[168] 21°15′50″N 157°48′32″W / 21.2638033°N 157.8089652°W / 21.2638033; -157.8089652Google Maps for Diamond Head State Monument
Haʻikū 800,000 ± 80,000[167] The Haʻikū volcanics are found on the crest of the Koʻolau Range.[175] A Haʻikū lava flow is found at Heʻeia Stream at 15 metres (50 ft) elevation.[63] At the head of the valley of the same name[168] 21°25′51″N 157°48′27″W / 21.43083°N 157.80750°W / 21.43083; -157.80750
Hanauma Bay 70,000 ± 30,000,[169] ot 68,000 ± 5,000 if identical with "Toilet Bowl"[79]   Tuff cone[69] East of Honolulu[172] close to Koko Head peninsula[128] 21°16′24″N 157°41′34″W / 21.27333°N 157.69278°W / 21.27333; -157.69278
Kaʻau 580,000 ± 120,000,[169] older age estimate is 650,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] At the head of the Pālolo valley[168] 21°19′40″N 157°46′39″W / 21.32778°N 157.77750°W / 21.32778; -157.77750
Kahauloa 70,000 ± 30,000[44] Tuff cone[69] East of Honolulu[172] just southwest from Koko Head.[176] 21°16′47″N 157°42′15″W / 21.2797414°N 157.7041887°W / 21.2797414; -157.7041887From Google Maps
Kaimukī 380,000 ± 110,000,[167] older age estimate is 280,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] Lava cone[177] or lava dome[81] In Kaimukī, Honolulu[168] on the northern flank of Diamond Head[81] 21°17′08″N 157°48′32″W / 21.28556°N 157.80889°W / 21.28556; -157.80889
Kalama 71,000 ± 6,000,[79] older age estimates are 34,000,[122] 30,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] and another is 80,000 ± 50,000[44] Lava flow with a cinder cone;[177] with a volume of 0.11 cubic kilometres (0.026 cu mi) the Kalama lava flow is the largest of the Honolulu Volcanics.[31] Northeast of Koko Head[172] 21°17′37″N 157°40′01″W / 21.29361°N 157.66694°W / 21.29361; -157.66694
Kalihi 460,000 ± 70,000,[167] older age estimates are 460,000–580,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] Kalihi volcanics on the crest of the Koʻolau Range,[178] which consist of cinder cones and lava flows.[179] A Kalihi lava flow is found in Honolulu at 12 metres (40 ft).[63] At the head of the valley of the same name[168] 21°20′33″N 157°52′39″W / 21.34250°N 157.87750°W / 21.34250; -157.87750
Kamanaiki 590,000 ± 20,000[167] Lava flows[177] In the Kamanaiki valley[168] 21°21′36″N 157°50′26″W / 21.36000°N 157.84056°W / 21.36000; -157.84056
Kāneʻohe 500,000 ± 90,000,[167] older age estimate is 700,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] 2 miles (3.2 km) south of the place of the same name[168] 21°23′51″N 157°47′46″W / 21.39750°N 157.79611°W / 21.39750; -157.79611
Kāohikaipu 63,000 ± 14,000[79]   Cone[69] that forms an island[180] Northeast of Makapuʻu Point,[172] the easternmost tip of Oʻahu[181] 21°19′13″N 157°39′23″W / 21.320340069547882°N 157.6563609211429°W / 21.320340069547882; -157.6563609211429Taken from Google Maps
Kaupō 68,500 ± 5,000,[79] older age estimates are 320,000 and 30,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] as well as 32,000[122] Spatter cone and lava flow[177] 21°18′56″N 157°39′52″W / 21.31556°N 157.66444°W / 21.31556; -157.66444
Koko Crater 100,000 ± 30,000,[169] older age estimate is 40,000 by potassium-argon dating for the Koko Crater Group[171]   Tuff cone[69][44] East of Honolulu[172] 21°16′45″N 157°41′18″W / 21.27917°N 157.68833°W / 21.27917; -157.68833
Luakaha 470,000 ± 30,000,[167] older age estimates are 360,000 and 420,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] Together with Makuku forms the Nuanuʻu group[182] At the head of the Nuanuʻu valley[168] 21°19′30″N 157°51′34″W / 21.32500°N 157.85944°W / 21.32500; -157.85944
Makalapa 470,000 ± 60,000[167] Maar[69] or crater just east from Pearl Harbor, which drops off steeply from about 30 metres (100 ft) to the shore.[136] Northwest from Honolulu[168] and directly east from Pearl Harbor[68] (at grounds of United States Pacific Fleet headquarters[183][184]: 21 ) 21°21′50″N 157°55′54″W / 21.36389°N 157.93167°W / 21.36389; -157.93167
Makawao Olomana Peak lies 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast[168]
Makuku 400,000 ± 30,000[167] Together with Luakaha forms the Nuanuʻu group[182] At the head of the Nuanuʻu valley[168] 21°20′32″N 157°50′55″W / 21.34222°N 157.84861°W / 21.34222; -157.84861
Mānana   Tuff cone,[69] also known as Rabbit Island,[36] in Waimānalo Bay.[39] Northwest of Makapuʻu Point,[172] the easternmost tip of Oʻahu.[181] It appears to be formed by two cones, with one crater still preserved.[185] 21°19′44″N 157°39′25″W / 21.328873289004072°N 157.6570605741068°W / 21.328873289004072; -157.6570605741068Taken from Google Maps
Mānoa 200,000–70,000[169] 21°18′37″N 157°48′56″W / 21.31028°N 157.81556°W / 21.31028; -157.81556
Maunawili 790,000–780,000[167] Cinder cone and lava flow[177] South of Olomana Peak[168] 21°21′14″N 157°45′40″W / 21.35389°N 157.76111°W / 21.35389; -157.76111
Mauʻumae 480,000 ± 40,000,[167] older age estimate is 430,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] In Kaimukī, Honolulu[168] 21°17′20″N 157°48′05″W / 21.28889°N 157.80139°W / 21.28889; -157.80139
Mōʻiliʻili 90,000 ± 90,000[169] and more recently 76,000; an older estimate is 67,000[122] 21°17′54.5″N 157°49′07″W / 21.298472°N 157.81861°W / 21.298472; -157.81861
Mōkōlea 580,000 ± 90,000[169]   Also known as Mokapu South[182] or Mokulea[186] In Kailua Bay[168] 21°26′04″N 157°43′22″W / 21.43444°N 157.72278°W / 21.43444; -157.72278
Moku Manu 700,000 ± 80,000[167]   An island.[187] North of Mokapu Point[168] 21°28′22″N 157°43′28″W / 21.47278°N 157.72444°W / 21.47278; -157.72444
Pali 640,000–600,000[167] At the Pali road[168] close to the crest of the Koʻolau Range[188] 21°22′27″N 157°47′29″W / 21.37417°N 157.79139°W / 21.37417; -157.79139
Pali Kilo[78] 400,000 ± 40,000[167] On Mokapu peninsula[168] 21°27′35″N 157°46′16″W / 21.45972°N 157.77111°W / 21.45972; -157.77111
Punchbowl Crater 430,000–390,000,[167] older age estimates are 300,000 and 530,000 by potassium-argon dating[171]   At the centre of Honolulu[168] 21°18′57.5″N 157°51′05″W / 21.315972°N 157.85139°W / 21.315972; -157.85139
Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa[78] 450,000–420,000[167]   Located on Mokapu peninsula, it is a symmetric cinder cone with associated lava flows.[189] On Mokapu peninsula[168] 21°27′28″N 157°45′42″W / 21.45778°N 157.76167°W / 21.45778; -157.76167
Puʻu Kakea / Round Top / Sugar Loaf 76,000 ± 1,000 by argon-argon dating,[190] another estimate for the group is 70,000 by potassium-argon dating[171] Tuff Cone,[69] cinder cone with ash and lava.[177] The vents that generated the flow are also known as Round Top and Puʻu Kakea[146] On the divide between Pauoa and Mānoa valleys[172] 21°18′55″N 157°48′59″W / 21.315362108192296°N 157.8163454550223°W / 21.315362108192296; -157.8163454550223Taken from Google Maps
Pyramid Rock 680,000 ± 100,000,[167] older age estimate is 710,000 by potassium-argon dating[171]   Located on Mokapu Peninsula,[63] close to Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa.[189] On Mokapu peninsula[168] 21°27′56″N 157°46′00″W / 21.46556°N 157.76667°W / 21.46556; -157.76667
Rocky Hill 60,000–40,000[169] or 60,000 ± 70,000[44] Located close to Punahou School,[191] the vent consists of one main cinder cone and subsidiary vents and lava flows.[192] At Punahou Street[168] 21°18′20″N 157°49′17″W / 21.30556°N 157.82139°W / 21.30556; -157.82139
Salt Lake 430,000[122]   Tuff Cone[177] Northwest from Honolulu[168] 21°21′34″N 157°54′48″W / 21.35957814997149°N 157.91320580927862°W / 21.35957814997149; -157.91320580927862Taken from Google Maps
Tantalus 110,000–80,000[169] Tuff Cone[69] On the divide between Pauoa and Mānoa valleys[172] 21°20′21.5″N 157°48′50″W / 21.339306°N 157.81389°W / 21.339306; -157.81389
Training School 580,000 ± 100,000[169] Lava flow accompanied by a mudflow[177] North of Olomana Peak[168] 21°23′29″N 157°44′57″W / 21.39139°N 157.74917°W / 21.39139; -157.74917
Ulupaʻu Head 600,000–400,000[193]   Ulupaʻu cone is located on Mokapu peninsula,[189] and forms its tip[194] and its highest point.[195] The tip of Mokapu peninsula[168] 21°27′16″N 157°43′41″W / 21.454556728663615°N 157.72796037142552°W / 21.454556728663615; -157.72796037142552Taken from Google Maps

Notes edit

  1. ^ The flexural arch is a structure formed when the crust under Hawaiʻi Island sags and bends under the weight of the growing volcanoes.[26]
  2. ^ Sometimes described as "Kalihi component"[99] which is found in all Koʻolau volcanic rocks[100]
  3. ^ Either ancient one or 100 million years old as is the lithosphere beneath Hawaii[102]

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honolulu, volcanics, group, volcanoes, which, form, volcanic, field, island, oʻahu, hawaiʻi, more, specifically, that, island, southeastern, sector, city, honolulu, from, pearl, harbor, mokapu, peninsula, part, rejuvenated, stage, hawaiian, volcanic, activity,. The Honolulu Volcanics are a group of volcanoes which form a volcanic field on the island of Oʻahu Hawaiʻi more specifically in that island s southeastern sector and in the city of Honolulu from Pearl Harbor to the Mokapu Peninsula It is part of the rejuvenated stage of Hawaiian volcanic activity which occurred after the main stage of volcanic activity that on Oʻahu built the Koʻolau volcano These volcanoes formed through dominantly explosive eruptions and gave rise to cinder cones lava flows tuff cones and volcanic islands Among these are well known landmarks such as Diamond Head and Punchbowl Crater Honolulu VolcanicsTopography of southeastern OʻahuHighest pointCoordinates21 22 N 157 48 W 21 37 N 157 8 W 21 37 157 8 1 GeographyHonolulu Volcanics Volcanic activity began less than one million years ago and occurred at between 40 and 30 separate volcanic vents some of which are submarine Sea level varied during the activity of the volcanic field and some volcanic eruptions have been dated through correlation with individual sea level fluctuations The field erupted various kinds of lavas of mostly basaltic type with a high content of xenoliths During eruptions ascending magma often underwent interactions with water and thus caused steam explosions and the formation of particular volcanic structures such as tuff cones The last eruption took place 35 000 or 76 000 years ago and future hazardous eruptions are possible Contents 1 Geography and geomorphology 1 1 Description of individual volcanoes 2 Geology 2 1 Composition 2 2 Origin of the rocks 2 3 Groundwater content 3 Eruption history 3 1 Chronology 3 2 Eruption characteristics 4 Youngest activity and hazards 5 Geothermal power prospecting 6 List of vents 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 SourcesGeography and geomorphology editThe Honolulu Volcanics are a series of volcanoes in the southeastern sector of Oʻahu 2 and includes dikes lava flows spatter cones 3 tephra deposits 4 tuff cones 3 and mesas where the surrounding terrain has been eroded away 5 Vents span the area southeast of a line between Mokapu Peninsula and Pearl Harbor and extend from the ridges of Koʻolau volcano to below sea level and to the coast plain of southern Oʻahu 6 The system takes its name from Honolulu the capital of Hawaiʻi 7 as craters are scattered in and around the city 8 The volcanic system includes well known landmarks of Honolulu such as Diamond Head Koko Head Punchbowl Crater 3 Rabbit Island Tantalus 9 Hanauma Bay notable as a snorkeling site 10 and the Mokapu Peninsula 11 which is the location of Marine Corps Base Hawaiʻi 12 The United States military has made use of some of the volcanic islands that were formed by the Honolulu Volcanics 13 The Koko area is designated as the Koko Head Regional Park 14 and Hanauma Bay is also a state park 15 Parts of this system are among the best known volcanic vents of Hawaiʻi 16 About 30 40 vents have been identified 17 Most cinder cones on Oʻahu are quite large over 76 metres 250 ft high and up to 0 80 kilometres 0 5 mi wide 18 Some of the lava flows filled deep valleys cut into the older Koʻolau volcano 19 and displaced streams that previously ran through these valleys for example water passing over a lava flow in Kamanaiki Valley forms a waterfall 20 Together with sediments coming down from the mountains and coral reef growth the deposits of the Honolulu Volcanics have formed the coastal plain on which the city of Honolulu and military installations are built 21 The vents of the Honolulu Volcanics follow northeastward trending 6 alignments that are at right angles to the rift zone of the Koʻolau volcano 22 From northwest to southeast these are the Haʻiku Rift the Tantalus Rift the Kaimuki Kaʻau Rift and the Koko Head Koko Rift 23 24 but each rift has had eruptions at different times and with different compositions 25 It is not clear whether these alignments are in any way related to the structure of the previous Koʻolau volcano instead of being controlled by the crust of the Pacific Ocean 6 but the trends along the Koko and Tantalus Rifts are parallel to that of the flexural arch a of Hawaiʻi Island 27 There is also a hypothetical Diamond Head fault that may be associated with earthquakes on Oahu that occurred in 1948 1951 and 1961 1981 but it is not parallel to these alignments and its very existence is questionable 28 Submarine vents are also known 29 including a 300 metre 980 ft high solitary cone with two ridges off northeast Oʻahu which is covered by pillow lavas and volcaniclastic sediments 30 At least five cones 31 are found off the southwestern extension of the Koko Rift 32 where they are situated on a southwestward extending ridge Another set of submarine vents is found south of Diamond Head 33 It was once proposed that some seamounts underwater mountains off northeastern Oʻahu such as Tuscaloosa Seamount are related to the volcanic series 34 today however they are considered to be fragments of the giant Nuʻuanu Slide off northeastern Oʻahu 35 nbsp Hanauma Bay in the foreground Koko is in the middle nbsp Diamond Head to the left Punchbowl in the middle Description of individual volcanoes edit Most of the present day shoreline of Hawaiʻi Kai was formed by Honolulu Volcanics 36 the Kuapa Pond is a leftover lake between the new shoreline and the old shoreline of the Koʻolau volcano 37 The volcanic vents there include Koko Head the Hanauma Bay craters Kahauloa crater bay a wave eroded cone Koko Crater and Kalama cinder cone 36 Koko Head cones are heavily eroded and the sea has broken into one of the cones exposing its structure in outcrops 38 Koko Head is the largest cone of the Honolulu Volcanics 39 and the crater of Koko Crater is about 1 kilometre 0 62 mi wide 40 Hanauma Bay close to Kalanianaʻole Highway is located 13 kilometres 8 1 mi east of Honolulu 41 and is a 0 4 by 0 8 kilometres 0 25 mi 0 50 mi large 18 metres 59 ft deep 42 compound crater 43 tuff cone 44 with several associated dykes and lava flows 45 It was breached by the sea 44 and coral reefs grow within it 46 Together with Kahauloa and Kalama all these vents form the Koko Rift 29 Farther northeast lie the Kaupō lava flow and the islands of Kaohikaipu and Manana 47 all these except Manana are also in the Koko Rift 48 49 This 15 kilometres 9 3 mi long rift includes at least 12 separate volcanic vents 25 and its vents appear to have formed in a single eruption 50 Diamond Head is a 1 700 metre 5 600 ft rim to rim wide 40 typical tuff cone with a wide and not overly deep crater that forms a prominent promontory east of Honolulu 38 Inland from Diamond Head lie the Kaimuki and Mauʻumae cones 51 which appear to come from a shared fissure 38 Mauʻumae features a lava flow 52 and Kaimuki is an unusual lava cone with a summit crater 53 Its slopes are gentle and lava ponded against topographical obstacles 54 The Kaimuki and Kaʻau cinder cones together with Mauʻumae and Diamond Head form the Kaʻau or Kaimuki rift zone 55 the Kaʻau crater lies close to the crest of the Koʻolau Range and is filled by a swamp that drains into Waimao stream 56 Punchbowl Crater rises north of 57 and at the centre of Honolulu and is a good outlook to the city and its surroundings 7 The Mokapu peninsula was formed by Honolulu Volcanics and includes the three volcanic vents of Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa Pyramid Rock and Ulapaʻu Head additional vents form islets off the peninsula 58 such as Moku Manu 59 and Mōkōlea Rock Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa is a cinder cone in the middle of the peninsula 60 Pyramid Rock at the northwestern tip 61 is deeply eroded and probably the oldest vent in the peninsula and Ulapaʻu Head is a crater that was breached by the sea 60 and of which only a crescent like western part remains 62 Salt Lake Crater 63 contains a salt lake and is located east from Pearl Harbor 64 the salt lake formed when salty groundwater seeped into the crater and was concentrated by evaporation 65 A cluster of additional older vents known as ʻAliamanu Makalapa ʻAliamanu School Cone Moanalua Cone ʻAkulikuli Vent and Wiliki Cone are associated with Salt Lake Crater 66 The Salt Lake Tuff is associated with these craters and covers an area of at least 13 square kilometres 5 sq mi 67 Honolulu International Airport and Hickham Air Force Base lie south and southwest from the vents respectively 68 Some of these vents have been identified as maars 69 Geology editThe Honolulu Volcanics developed on the 2 3 million year old Koʻolau Volcanic Series 2 which forms the core of eastern Oahu and extends underwater far from the shore 3 Like other Hawaiian volcanoes Koʻolau is a shield volcano that grew through lava flows erupted from a rift system with a central caldera although a large section of the volcano has sunk below sea level This volcano constitutes the tholeiitic stage of Hawaiian volcanism 70 and developed possibly during Miocene to Pleistocene time 41 Before Koʻolau volcano was active between 3 5 and 2 74 million years ago Waiʻanae volcano formed the western part of Oʻahu 71 Koʻolau volcano appears to be unrelated to the Honolulu Volcanics 6 which are considered to be a separate volcanic system 58 sometimes the Kokohead Volcanics are split off from the Honolulu Volcanics 72 The Honolulu Volcanics constitute a late stage of volcanism 70 which in Hawaiʻi is known as the rejuvenated stage 73 and the third stage of a typical Hawaiian volcano 19 They have a much smaller volume than the Koʻolau volcano 22 even though their lava flows are usually thicker 74 the unconformity that separates the Honolulu Volcanics from the Koʻolau Volcanic Series was already recognized in the 19th century 75 As Hawaiian volcanoes grow they start to sink under their weight As volcanism moves along the Hawaiian chain the Hawaiian Arch moves behind the volcanism at a distance of several hundred kilometres and appears to have passed under Oahu in geologically recent times The tectonic effect of the Hawaiian Arch passing under the island may be responsible for the onset of Honolulu Volcanics volcanism as well as of the Kōloa Volcanics on Kauaʻi and perhaps for future volcanism on Maui or Molokaʻi 76 but also for ongoing uplift on Oʻahu 77 Other proposed mechanisms are a conductive heating of the lithosphere or ongoing upwelling in the mantle plume 78 There is evidence that a fall in sea level at the beginning of the last ice age triggered the last eruptions 79 The terrain that the volcanoes developed on includes both old volcanic rocks of the Koʻolau volcano sediments of the coastal plains 4 and soils 68 Some Honolulu Volcanics have grown on coral deposits 37 Koko Head developed on limestone for example 80 and coral reef development was widespread during the activity of the Honolulu Volcanics 81 The Honolulu Volcanics are not associated with either aeromagnetic 72 or gravimetric anomalies only Salt Lake Crater has an associated gravity anomaly 82 There is rejuvenated volcanism on Waiʻanae volcano also but it appears to be older than the Honolulu Volcanics 83 Composition edit The petrology of the Honolulu Volcanics is well studied 84 The volcanic rocks of the Honolulu Volcanics are diverse they include alkali basalts melilite and nepheline basalts basanites 3 melilite 63 nephelinite 85 and websterite 63 and form an alkaline 81 nephelinite suite 2 The variations in composition reflect distinct proportions of melts produced from parent rocks 86 Phenocrysts include augite labradorite olivine 49 and plagioclase 87 additionally spinels are found in the rocks 63 Xenoliths of amphibole calcite clinopyroxene dunite garnet garnet peridotite orthopyroxene phlogopite garnet pyroxenite lherzolite and spinel have been described 81 88 2 The most common ones are dunite garnet containing rocks and lherzolite 89 and the relative prevalence of the various xenoliths is a function of the position of their source vent relative to the Koʻolau caldera Their formation was influenced by mantle rocks left over from the Koʻolau volcano 90 Coral fragments have been found in Koko and Salt Lake rocks 2 and metamorphic rocks included in the volcanics may be part of the basement that the magmas of the volcanoes traversed 3 Calcite which in the form of crystals gives Diamond Head its name 81 in the volcanic rocks may come from coral reefs groundwater or even from the magma itself 2 isotope ratios of the rocks indicate that groundwater carbonates are the most important source however 91 In Punchbowl Crater where the rocks have been quarried they have a brown to yellow colour 57 Cinders have red black colours which can grade to yellow when they are hydrothermally altered due to the formation of the glassy rock palagonite 53 Many of the erupted rocks have undergone various degrees of alteration including the formation of zeolitic palagonite 92 minerals included in altered rocks include analcime aragonite calcite chabazite erionite faujasite gonnardite gypsum montmorillonite natrolite opal phillipsite and thomsonite 93 In some vents such as Diamond Head the rocks are so heavily altered that their original composition 29 and texture can no longer be reconstructed 94 Origin of the rocks edit The Honolulu Volcanics rocks originate at greater depths than the rocks from Koʻolau volcano and their composition is fairly dissimilar as well 95 while there are substantial geochemical similarities to young volcanic rocks from East Molokaʻi Kauaʻi and West Maui 96 Jackson and Wright suggested that the pyroxenite may be the source rock of the magmas with orthopyroxene rich rocks being leftovers from the melting process 63 strontium isotope ratios endorse this origin although none of the xenoliths appears to be entirely representative of the source melts 97 Water and carbon dioxide containing volatiles may have altered the source rocks of the Honolulu Volcanics melts before these actually melted 98 In terms of the ultimate origin of the magmas either an origin from a mixing between MORB mantle with mantle plume rocks b 101 the lithosphere 73 c or exclusively from lithospheric mantle have been proposed 103 Research published in 2007 favoured an origin from a depleted mantle component along with a mantle plume Kalihi component 104 with additional material contributed from the margins of the mantle plume 100 Magma may have remained in the crust for months or years before erupting 79 Groundwater content edit Groundwater contained in Honolulu Volcanics rocks while not voluminous is important in some areas such as Maunawili Valley 105 Moreover impermeable tuff layers can hold groundwater in rock layers above them 53 However Koʻolau volcanic rocks contain most of the groundwater on Oʻahu 106 and most Honolulu Volcanics have little significance 74 Some groundwater in Honolulu Volcanics rocks is saline and has been used both as a water source for a sea life park at Makapuʻu and for the discharge of salty wastewaters 105 Eruption history editChronology edit The activity of the Honolulu Volcanics began less than one million years ago 107 during the late Pleistocene and Holocene 2 after volcanic activity at Koʻolau had ceased and the volcano been substantially eroded The first eruptions occurred within the Koʻolau caldera and the youngest in the far southeastern part of Oʻahu coinciding with the Koko Rift 22 There is otherwise little evidence for a spatial pattern in the volcanic activity with each rift having eruptions widely spaced in time 108 The lava flows from Honolulu Volcanics have been used to construct a history of variations of Earth s magnetic field 109 Eruptions of the Honolulu Volcanics have been correlated to shorelines 110 generated by sea level variations which have left both drowned and emergent platforms and terraces on Oʻahu 17 Some volcanoes formed when sea level was lower than today and thus part of their structures are now submerged others formed when it was higher and grew on reefs 111 These sea level variations are a function of glacial interglacial changes with higher sea levels associated with interglacials 112 when polar glaciers expand and retreat 110 Thus four stages of volcanic activity have been defined a first during the Kahipa highstand a second during the Kaʻena and Laʻie highstands 113 a third during the Waipiʻo and Waimanalo highstands and a fourth after the Waimanalo highstand 114 In turn the Waimanalo stage was correlated to the last interglacial 115 Sangamonian interstadial 114 and the Kaʻena highstand to an interglacial 600 000 100 000 years ago 116 First dating efforts yielded ages of Pleistocene Holocene based on sea level variations 22 while potassium argon dating has yielded ages ranging between 800 000 and 60 000 years old 73 However the presence of excess radiogenic argon 107 due to the xenoliths 117 makes dates obtained by potassium argon dating unreliable 107 and dates older than 800 000 years are especially questionable 84 Argon argon dating has been applied to submarine vents of the Honolulu Volcanics and has yielded ages of 700 000 to 400 000 years for submarine vents northeast of Oʻahu 118 while the southwestern submarine vents have ages clustering around 140 000 50 000 years 119 in line with the ages of the Koko rift 26 Volcanic activity occurred in two pulses one between 800 000 and 250 000 years ago and the other in the last 120 000 years with a hiatus in between the two pulses 120 Sometimes the vents of the Sugar Loaf Tantalus Peak and Koko Rift area are classified separately from the other vents of the Honolulu Volcanics as they are usually less than 100 000 years old 121 Volcanic eruptions in the Koko Rift occurred between 100 000 and 60 000 years ago 44 it is not clear whether Koko Rift or Tantalus Rift erupted last as ages of 35 000 and 85 000 years before present have been obtained on the Koko Rift while the Tantalus Rift has yielded ages of 76 000 1 000 years ago 122 and the two rifts are clearly unrelated to each other 123 The average recurrence interval for eruptions in the Honolulu Volcanics is about 35 000 years assuming that the younger ages for the Koko Rift are correct 122 Eruption characteristics edit Many eruptions were highly explosive probably due to the magma being rich in gases threw tephra high into the air 6 and ripped pre existent volcanic rock and limestone out 124 When the rising magma intercepted water especially close to the coast steam explosions ensued which threw up rock debris including older rocks such as coral fragments Lava flows were erupted mainly during the late stage of the eruption and were typically of small dimensions the longest flow is 7 kilometres 4 3 mi long and the largest one at Kaimuki forms a 4 square kilometres 1 5 sq mi lava shield 125 or lava dome 81 Cinder cones form from the fallout of volcanic ejecta material which is variously described as cinder lava bombs pumice and spatter and forms layered deposits 53 Tuff cones in addition can also contain non magmatic ejecta 54 Many of these eruptions especially that of Diamond Head probably only lasted for a short time such as a few hours as has been observed in similar eruptions during historical time 126 The field has also seen many Surtseyan or phreatomagmatic eruptions especially at nearshore vents 84 when ascending magma encountered water such as at Manana Island Koko and Punchbowl these eruptions were explosive 127 and they are the best exposed site of Surtseyan activity in the United States 128 Some formed small islands when they emerged and one vent may now be buried beneath coral deposits 129 At Koko Crater and Diamond Head the amount of water interacting with the developing volcano varied over the course of the eruption as more water entered the vent when the eruption enlarged it 130 Volcanic rocks of Honolulu Volcanics include agglomerates breccia breccia tuffs scoria bombs and tuffs 111 Tephra takes the form of both lapilli and volcanic ash 92 and some eruptions were followed by lahars when volcanic ash was swept up by streams one such deposit is found in Palolo Valley 131 During eruptions trade winds blew material from the vent 80 this wind driven material transport is responsible for the frequently asymmetric shape of the volcanoes 132 such as at Diamond Head where the southeastern rim is the highest part of the crater rim 15 Drill cores in Hanauma Bay have found ash layers 133 a black ash known as black sand is widespread across Honolulu and originated in volcanic eruptions of the Honolulu Volcanics 134 and ash layers cover coral reef deposis both onshore and offshore as far as ʻEwa Beach 135 Ash from the Salt Lake Craters was transported by winds to Pearl Harbor and is considered to be responsible for the formation of the bay by closing off its access to the sea 136 Activity at specific vents At Diamond Head eruptions commenced underwater and first deposited white rocks formed mostly by reworked corals 137 Proper tuff layers were emplaced on top of this unit 138 The formation of Kaʻau Crater was also accompanied by phreatic activity that deposited alluvial tuffs 139 Some eruptions such as those of the Kaʻau Mōkōlea and Training School vents may have occurred as one sequence over a 13 kilometres 8 1 mi long line 120 Intense explosive eruptions took place when magma erupted underwater forming Hanauma Bay 14 The eruption took place in several stages pauses between these stages lasted no more than a few months 140 and erosion was already underway during the eruption 141 Hanauma Bay was colonized by coral reefs after it formed and marine benches developed within the bay 41 the exact origin of these benches is often not clear 42 The eruption of Kahauloa was synchronous to that of Hanauma Bay 141 Koko Head was formed by the Koko Tuff Later explosion craters such as Hanauma Bay developed within Koko Head 41 Koko Crater was also the source of an ash layer that covers the surrounding terrain 142 and of pyroclastic density flows 143 After Koko Head had formed a second volcanic explosion generated another crater on its eastern foot and filled gullies which had been carved into Koko Head by erosion 144 Punchbowl Crater formed from the fallout of an eruption column Material from the column fell onto the coral plain where the vent was located forming the crater 132 The formation of the Sugarloaf flow was accompanied by tephra fallout The tephra reached over 1 metre 3 ft 3 in thickness 6 kilometres 3 7 mi away in what is now downtown Honolulu 75 landing on a limestone 123 000 2 000 years old 145 The flow was erupted on a ridge west from the Manoa Valley 146 It is a 15 metres 49 ft thick ʻaʻa flow an unusual trait given its composition which resembles that of Nyiragongo volcano which produces fast flowing lava flows 75 The eruption of the Tantalus vent was apparently synchronous to that of Sugarloaf 145 both eruptions were highly explosive due to a high volatile content of the magmas shedding ash over a large area 147 Ulupaʻu Head crater contained a lake 148 which was once the largest lake of Hawaiʻi with a surface area of 0 5 0 6 square kilometres 0 19 0 23 sq mi 149 It persisted for a long time 148 during the Middle Pleistocene 150 until the sea breached the crater rim 149 A number of bird fossils have been found in the lake deposits 151 Rano Kau on Easter Island resembles the former Ulupaʻu Head lake 148 Many vents of the Honolulu Volcanics are furrowed 62 erosion has cut gullies in the slopes of Diamond Head 38 and Punchbowl Crater 152 Wavecut terraces formed in some volcanoes during sea level highstands 111 it is likely that wave erosion breached Hanauma Bay flooding it 14 either during or after the eruption that created it 45 nbsp Erosion gullies on the flanks of Koko CraterYoungest activity and hazards editThe youngest eruptions of the whole field took place either 30 000 84 or 76 000 years ago 122 making it the youngest rejuvenated volcanism in Hawaii 123 Some of the youngest volcanics of Honolulu Volcanics were once considered 5 000 years old 1 with an age of 7 000 years attributed to a volcanic event at Hanauma Bay 14 and another of 10 000 years to the Kaupō flow 153 However radiometric dating has not yielded ages younger than 31 000 43 000 years old 1 and most age estimates of less than 30 000 years ago are misinterpreted 121 There is no evidence in oral tradition for eruptions during historical times 154 Future eruptions of Honolulu Volcanics are possible 155 but the likelihood of a new event in the next hundred or thousand years is considered to be so small as to be negligible 156 it is probably comparable to the Kohala peninsula on Hawaiʻi the lowest risk area of the active island 157 Additionally only small areas of Oʻahu are likely to be affected by an eruption 156 Any future eruption is likely to occur in the southeastern sector of Oʻahu and will be of small volume 156 involving the emplacement of cinders lava flows and mudflows 71 with characteristics similar to those of past Honolulu Volcanics eruptions 6 Tephra fall would be drawn by winds in a most likely southwestward direction and could depending on the vent location fall over downtown Honolulu and Pearl Harbor 158 known dangers of tephra falls are collapsing roofs pollution of the air and of water resources impaired visibility and damage to machinery and vegetation Close to the vent volcanic gases and falling lava bombs would constitute additional dangers 159 Tephra deposits can be swept away by rainfall forming mudflows which owing to their high speed and density can be hazardous 160 Steam explosions could generate lateral blasts which can spread to distances of 8 kilometres 5 0 mi from vents at high speed and transport dangerous heat and debris Such lateral blasts may have occurred when Diamond Head Koko Head and Punchbowl formed 159 Lava flows can cause severe property damage as they can destroy structures in their way but owing to their slowness are seldom a threat to life additionally a lava flow would most likely be preceded by other eruptive phenomena which would drive people away from the hazard zone before a lava flow can become a threat 161 Geothermal power prospecting editThe Mokapu Peninsula has been prospected for the presence of geothermal power resources but the presence of such resources was judged to be unlikely Short lasting volcanism typical for Honolulu Volcanics is unlikely to leave remnant heat resources 162 The only anomalously warm springs in the area are found within the Koʻolau caldera and are related to that volcanic system rather than the Honolulu Volcanics 163 Some evidence of geothermal activity has been found elsewhere on Oʻahu 164 List of vents editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Name Age in years before present Photo Traits of the vent most vents include a cone and lava flows 165 Location Coordinates per Ozawa Tagami and Garcia 2005 166 ʻAinoni 440 000 30 000 167 This vent lies 2 miles 3 2 km southwest of Olomana Peak 168 21 21 14 N 157 45 40 W 21 35389 N 157 76111 W 21 35389 157 76111 ʻAkulikuli 290 000 70 000 167 21 21 03 N 157 55 00 W 21 35083 N 157 91667 W 21 35083 157 91667 Aliamanu Crater 250 000 40 000 169 Maar 69 This vent is located between Pearl Harbor and Honolulu 168 directly northwest from Salt Lake Crater 68 21 21 43 N 157 54 32 W 21 36194 N 157 90889 W 21 36194 157 90889 Black Point 400 000 330 000 170 older age estimates are 290 000 and 410 000 by potassium argon dating 171 as well as 300 000 and 480 000 122 Apparently two eruptions occurred here 172 Cone 69 and lava flow just south of Diamond Head 173 Southeast of Diamond Head 168 21 15 34 5 N 157 47 47 W 21 259583 N 157 79639 W 21 259583 157 79639 Castle 410 000 50 000 167 older age estimates are gt 800 000 years old 55 or 850 000 by potassium argon dating 171 Lava flow at the foot of the Nuanuʻu cliffs 55 4 8 kilometres 3 mi east of Kailua 168 21 24 00 N 157 46 09 W 21 40000 N 157 76917 W 21 40000 157 76917 Diamond Head 520 000 350 000 174 or 360 000 70 000 119 nbsp Southeast of Honolulu 168 21 15 50 N 157 48 32 W 21 2638033 N 157 8089652 W 21 2638033 157 8089652 Google Maps for Diamond Head State Monument Haʻiku 800 000 80 000 167 The Haʻiku volcanics are found on the crest of the Koʻolau Range 175 A Haʻiku lava flow is found at Heʻeia Stream at 15 metres 50 ft elevation 63 At the head of the valley of the same name 168 21 25 51 N 157 48 27 W 21 43083 N 157 80750 W 21 43083 157 80750 Hanauma Bay 70 000 30 000 169 ot 68 000 5 000 if identical with Toilet Bowl 79 nbsp Tuff cone 69 East of Honolulu 172 close to Koko Head peninsula 128 21 16 24 N 157 41 34 W 21 27333 N 157 69278 W 21 27333 157 69278 Kaʻau 580 000 120 000 169 older age estimate is 650 000 by potassium argon dating 171 At the head of the Palolo valley 168 21 19 40 N 157 46 39 W 21 32778 N 157 77750 W 21 32778 157 77750 Kahauloa 70 000 30 000 44 Tuff cone 69 East of Honolulu 172 just southwest from Koko Head 176 21 16 47 N 157 42 15 W 21 2797414 N 157 7041887 W 21 2797414 157 7041887 From Google Maps Kaimuki 380 000 110 000 167 older age estimate is 280 000 by potassium argon dating 171 Lava cone 177 or lava dome 81 In Kaimuki Honolulu 168 on the northern flank of Diamond Head 81 21 17 08 N 157 48 32 W 21 28556 N 157 80889 W 21 28556 157 80889 Kalama 71 000 6 000 79 older age estimates are 34 000 122 30 000 by potassium argon dating 171 and another is 80 000 50 000 44 Lava flow with a cinder cone 177 with a volume of 0 11 cubic kilometres 0 026 cu mi the Kalama lava flow is the largest of the Honolulu Volcanics 31 Northeast of Koko Head 172 21 17 37 N 157 40 01 W 21 29361 N 157 66694 W 21 29361 157 66694 Kalihi 460 000 70 000 167 older age estimates are 460 000 580 000 by potassium argon dating 171 Kalihi volcanics on the crest of the Koʻolau Range 178 which consist of cinder cones and lava flows 179 A Kalihi lava flow is found in Honolulu at 12 metres 40 ft 63 At the head of the valley of the same name 168 21 20 33 N 157 52 39 W 21 34250 N 157 87750 W 21 34250 157 87750 Kamanaiki 590 000 20 000 167 Lava flows 177 In the Kamanaiki valley 168 21 21 36 N 157 50 26 W 21 36000 N 157 84056 W 21 36000 157 84056 Kaneʻohe 500 000 90 000 167 older age estimate is 700 000 by potassium argon dating 171 2 miles 3 2 km south of the place of the same name 168 21 23 51 N 157 47 46 W 21 39750 N 157 79611 W 21 39750 157 79611 Kaohikaipu 63 000 14 000 79 nbsp Cone 69 that forms an island 180 Northeast of Makapuʻu Point 172 the easternmost tip of Oʻahu 181 21 19 13 N 157 39 23 W 21 320340069547882 N 157 6563609211429 W 21 320340069547882 157 6563609211429 Taken from Google Maps Kaupō 68 500 5 000 79 older age estimates are 320 000 and 30 000 by potassium argon dating 171 as well as 32 000 122 Spatter cone and lava flow 177 21 18 56 N 157 39 52 W 21 31556 N 157 66444 W 21 31556 157 66444 Koko Crater 100 000 30 000 169 older age estimate is 40 000 by potassium argon dating for the Koko Crater Group 171 nbsp Tuff cone 69 44 East of Honolulu 172 21 16 45 N 157 41 18 W 21 27917 N 157 68833 W 21 27917 157 68833 Luakaha 470 000 30 000 167 older age estimates are 360 000 and 420 000 by potassium argon dating 171 Together with Makuku forms the Nuanuʻu group 182 At the head of the Nuanuʻu valley 168 21 19 30 N 157 51 34 W 21 32500 N 157 85944 W 21 32500 157 85944 Makalapa 470 000 60 000 167 Maar 69 or crater just east from Pearl Harbor which drops off steeply from about 30 metres 100 ft to the shore 136 Northwest from Honolulu 168 and directly east from Pearl Harbor 68 at grounds of United States Pacific Fleet headquarters 183 184 21 21 21 50 N 157 55 54 W 21 36389 N 157 93167 W 21 36389 157 93167 Makawao Olomana Peak lies 2 miles 3 2 km northeast 168 Makuku 400 000 30 000 167 Together with Luakaha forms the Nuanuʻu group 182 At the head of the Nuanuʻu valley 168 21 20 32 N 157 50 55 W 21 34222 N 157 84861 W 21 34222 157 84861 Manana nbsp Tuff cone 69 also known as Rabbit Island 36 in Waimanalo Bay 39 Northwest of Makapuʻu Point 172 the easternmost tip of Oʻahu 181 It appears to be formed by two cones with one crater still preserved 185 21 19 44 N 157 39 25 W 21 328873289004072 N 157 6570605741068 W 21 328873289004072 157 6570605741068 Taken from Google Maps Manoa 200 000 70 000 169 21 18 37 N 157 48 56 W 21 31028 N 157 81556 W 21 31028 157 81556 Maunawili 790 000 780 000 167 Cinder cone and lava flow 177 South of Olomana Peak 168 21 21 14 N 157 45 40 W 21 35389 N 157 76111 W 21 35389 157 76111 Mauʻumae 480 000 40 000 167 older age estimate is 430 000 by potassium argon dating 171 In Kaimuki Honolulu 168 21 17 20 N 157 48 05 W 21 28889 N 157 80139 W 21 28889 157 80139 Mōʻiliʻili 90 000 90 000 169 and more recently 76 000 an older estimate is 67 000 122 21 17 54 5 N 157 49 07 W 21 298472 N 157 81861 W 21 298472 157 81861 Mōkōlea 580 000 90 000 169 nbsp Also known as Mokapu South 182 or Mokulea 186 In Kailua Bay 168 21 26 04 N 157 43 22 W 21 43444 N 157 72278 W 21 43444 157 72278 Moku Manu 700 000 80 000 167 nbsp An island 187 North of Mokapu Point 168 21 28 22 N 157 43 28 W 21 47278 N 157 72444 W 21 47278 157 72444 Pali 640 000 600 000 167 At the Pali road 168 close to the crest of the Koʻolau Range 188 21 22 27 N 157 47 29 W 21 37417 N 157 79139 W 21 37417 157 79139 Pali Kilo 78 400 000 40 000 167 On Mokapu peninsula 168 21 27 35 N 157 46 16 W 21 45972 N 157 77111 W 21 45972 157 77111 Punchbowl Crater 430 000 390 000 167 older age estimates are 300 000 and 530 000 by potassium argon dating 171 nbsp At the centre of Honolulu 168 21 18 57 5 N 157 51 05 W 21 315972 N 157 85139 W 21 315972 157 85139 Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa 78 450 000 420 000 167 nbsp Located on Mokapu peninsula it is a symmetric cinder cone with associated lava flows 189 On Mokapu peninsula 168 21 27 28 N 157 45 42 W 21 45778 N 157 76167 W 21 45778 157 76167 Puʻu Kakea Round Top Sugar Loaf 76 000 1 000 by argon argon dating 190 another estimate for the group is 70 000 by potassium argon dating 171 Tuff Cone 69 cinder cone with ash and lava 177 The vents that generated the flow are also known as Round Top and Puʻu Kakea 146 On the divide between Pauoa and Manoa valleys 172 21 18 55 N 157 48 59 W 21 315362108192296 N 157 8163454550223 W 21 315362108192296 157 8163454550223 Taken from Google Maps Pyramid Rock 680 000 100 000 167 older age estimate is 710 000 by potassium argon dating 171 nbsp Located on Mokapu Peninsula 63 close to Puʻu Hawaiʻiloa 189 On Mokapu peninsula 168 21 27 56 N 157 46 00 W 21 46556 N 157 76667 W 21 46556 157 76667 Rocky Hill 60 000 40 000 169 or 60 000 70 000 44 Located close to Punahou School 191 the vent consists of one main cinder cone and subsidiary vents and lava flows 192 At Punahou Street 168 21 18 20 N 157 49 17 W 21 30556 N 157 82139 W 21 30556 157 82139 Salt Lake 430 000 122 nbsp Tuff Cone 177 Northwest from Honolulu 168 21 21 34 N 157 54 48 W 21 35957814997149 N 157 91320580927862 W 21 35957814997149 157 91320580927862 Taken from Google Maps Tantalus 110 000 80 000 169 Tuff Cone 69 On the divide between Pauoa and Manoa valleys 172 21 20 21 5 N 157 48 50 W 21 339306 N 157 81389 W 21 339306 157 81389 Training School 580 000 100 000 169 Lava flow accompanied by a mudflow 177 North of Olomana Peak 168 21 23 29 N 157 44 57 W 21 39139 N 157 74917 W 21 39139 157 74917 Ulupaʻu Head 600 000 400 000 193 nbsp Ulupaʻu cone is located on Mokapu peninsula 189 and forms its tip 194 and its highest point 195 The tip of Mokapu peninsula 168 21 27 16 N 157 43 41 W 21 454556728663615 N 157 72796037142552 W 21 454556728663615 157 72796037142552 Taken from Google MapsNotes edit The flexural arch is a structure formed when the crust under Hawaiʻi Island sags and bends under the weight of the growing volcanoes 26 Sometimes described as Kalihi component 99 which is found in all Koʻolau volcanic rocks 100 Either ancient one or 100 million years old as is the lithosphere beneath Hawaii 102 References edit a b c Koolau Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution a b c d e f g O Neil Hedge amp Jackson 1970 p 253 a b c d e f Wright amp Jackson 1970 p 405 a b Hay amp Iijima 1968b p 334 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 64 a b c d e f Crandell 1975 p 4 a b MacCaughey 1916 p 607 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 98 Feldman C Siegel B Z 1 June 1980 Hawaii Energy Resource Overviews Volume II Impact of geothermal development on the geology and hydrology of the Hawaiian Islands Report p 32 doi 10 2172 6028655 OSTI 6028655 Clague et al 2006 p 279 Fletcher C H Romine B M Genz A S Barbee M M Dyer Matthew Anderson T R Lim S C Vitousek Sean Bochicchio Christopher Richmond B M 2012 National assessment of shoreline change Historical shoreline change in the Hawaiian Islands Open File Report 2011 1051 U S Geological Survey p 31 Defense Technical Information Center 1982 p 3 Fisher amp Richardson 1950 p 286 a b c d Geology City and County of Honolulu Retrieved 14 April 2019 a b Moberly amp Walker 1987 p 6 Sherrod et al 2007 p 23 a b Doell 1972 p 2129 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 13 a b Frey amp Clague 1982 p 448 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 63 Ohrt Frederick 1947 Water Development and Salt Water Intrusion on Pacific Islands Journal American Water Works Association 39 10 982 doi 10 1002 j 1551 8833 1947 tb18615 x ISSN 0003 150X JSTOR 23349795 a b c d Wright amp Jackson 1970 p 409 Defense Technical Information Center 1982 p 5 Winchell 1947 p 19 a b Garcia et al 2022 p 1 a b Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 9 Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 10 Cox Doak C August 1986 The Oahu Earthquake of June 1948 Associated Shocks and the Hypothetical Diamond Head Fault Report p 21 hdl 10125 24215 a b c Clague et al 2006 p 281 Clague et al 2006 p 283 a b Garcia et al 2022 p 2 Clague et al 2006 p 286 Clague et al 2006 p 294 Brill Richard C Langford Stephen A April 1972 Giant Submarine Landslides on the Hawaiian Ridge A Rebuttal Pacific Science 26 2 257 hdl 10125 405 ISSN 0030 8870 Morgan Julia K Resig Johanna M Siesser William G March 2006 Microfossil assemblages on Tuscaloosa Seamount and their constraints on the age of the Nuʻuanu landslide north of Oahu HI Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 151 1 3 270 Bibcode 2006JVGR 151 269M doi 10 1016 j jvolgeores 2005 07 031 a b c Takasaki amp Mink 1982 p 55 a b Takasaki amp Mink 1982 p 54 a b c d Dana 1889 p 96 a b Hay amp Iijima 1968 p 142 a b Sheridan amp Wohletz 1983 p 388 a b c d Olson amp Easton 1976 p 711 a b Stephens amp Bryan 1993 p 377 Branner 1903 p 313 a b c d e f g Rottas amp Houghton 2012 p 1683 a b Stephens amp Bryan 1993 p 379 Olson amp Easton 1976 p 712 Rottas amp Houghton 2012 p 1684 Garcia et al 2022 p 4 a b Winchell 1947 p 21 Garcia et al 2022 p 3 Takasaki amp Mink 1982 p 61 Hitchcock 1906 p 471 a b c d Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 14 a b Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 15 a b c Naughton Lewis amp Gramlich 1971 p 1402 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 123 a b Dana 1889 p 95 a b Defense Technical Information Center 1982 p 10 Defense Technical Information Center 1982 p 15 a b Defense Technical Information Center 1982 p 14 Wentworth amp Hoffmeister 1939 p 1555 a b Wentworth amp Hoffmeister 1939 p 1557 a b c d e f g h O Neil Hedge amp Jackson 1970 p 254 Pollock 1928 pp 54 55 Resig Johanna M 1 April 1974 Recent foraminifera from a landlocked Hawaiian lake Journal of Foraminiferal Research 4 2 69 doi 10 2113 gsjfr 4 2 69 ISSN 0096 1191 Pankiwskyj Kost A April 1972 Geology of the Salt Lake Area Oahu Hawaii Pacific Science 26 2 243 hdl 10125 404 ISSN 0030 8870 Hay amp Iijima 1968b p 345 a b c d Hay amp Iijima 1968b p 348 a b c d e f g h i j k Koolau Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Synonyms amp Subfeatures a b Wright amp Jackson 1970 p 406 a b Crandell 1975 p 2 a b Thomas et al 1979 p 65 a b c Fekiacova et al 2007 p 67 a b Takasaki amp Mink 1982 p 7 a b c Clague et al 2016 p 253 Wright amp Jackson 1970 p 427 Muhs amp Szabo 1994 p 324 a b c Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 2 a b c d e f Jicha Garcia amp Lormand 2023 p 2483 a b Dana 1889 p 97 a b c d e f g Bamlett Michael 1990 Geological excursion guide 7 The volcanism of the Hawaiian Islands Geology Today 6 5 2 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2451 1990 tb00728 x ISSN 1365 2451 Woollard George P Machesky L F Strange William E July 1965 A Gravity Survey of the Island of Oahu Hawaii Pacific Science 19 3 353 hdl 10125 10759 ISSN 0030 8870 Stearns 1939 p 10 a b c d Clague et al 2006 p 280 Fekiacova et al 2007 p 68 Frey amp Clague 1982 p 498 Winchell 1947 p 20 Wright amp Jackson 1970 p 414 Wright amp Jackson 1970 pp 415 416 Wright amp Jackson 1970 p 420 O Neil Hedge amp Jackson 1970 p 255 a b Hay amp Iijima 1968b p 336 Hay amp Iijima 1968b pp 346 347 Sheridan amp Wohletz 1983 p 406 Frey amp Clague 1982 p 449 Fekiacova et al 2007 p 78 O Neil Hedge amp Jackson 1970 p 257 Gurriet Philippe March 1987 A thermal model for the origin of post erosional alkalic lava Hawaii Earth and Planetary Science Letters 82 1 2 155 Bibcode 1987E amp PSL 82 153G doi 10 1016 0012 821X 87 90115 4 Fekiacova et al 2007 p 73 a b Fekiacova et al 2007 p 80 Clague Frey amp Yang 2003 p 604 Fekiacova et al 2007 p 76 Clague Frey amp Yang 2003 p 605 Fekiacova et al 2007 p 77 a b Takasaki amp Mink 1982 p 2 Takasaki amp Mink 1982 p 6 a b c Frey amp Clague 1982 p 450 Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 pp 8 9 Doell 1972 p 2132 a b Naughton Lewis amp Gramlich 1971 p 1399 a b c Hay amp Iijima 1968b p 339 Doell 1972 p 2130 Herrero Bervera amp Valet 2002 p 84 a b Herrero Bervera amp Valet 2002 p 85 Muhs amp Szabo 1994 p 315 Muhs amp Szabo 1994 p 323 Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 3 Clague et al 2006 p 304 a b Clague et al 2006 p 305 a b Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 8 a b Sherrod et al 2007 p 24 a b c d e f g h Clague et al 2016 p 274 a b Jicha Garcia amp Lormand 2023 p 2478 Jicha Garcia amp Lormand 2023 p 2479 Crandell 1975 p 5 Wentworth amp Hoffmeister 1939 p 1558 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 16 a b Moberly amp Walker 1987 p 5 Clague et al 2006 p 299 Sheridan amp Wohletz 1983 pp 409 410 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 19 a b MacCaughey 1916 p 609 Olson amp Easton 1976 p 716 MacCaughey 1916 p 611 Morgan Charles L Barry James H Jr Cruickshank Michael J 1 January 1998 Characterization of marine aggregates off Waikiki O ahu Hawai i Marine Georesources amp Geotechnology 16 1 79 doi 10 1080 10641199809379958 ISSN 1064 119X a b Pollock 1928 p 55 Sheridan amp Wohletz 1983 p 404 Sheridan amp Wohletz 1983 p 405 Winchell 1947 p 12 Rottas amp Houghton 2012 p 1693 a b Rottas amp Houghton 2012 p 1697 Olson amp Easton 1976 pp 711 712 Skilling I P Bluth J Simoneau E 1 December 2011 Stratigraphy paleoenvironment and emplacement mechanisms of the Koko fissure craters O ahu Hawai i AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts 31 V31E 2572 Bibcode 2011AGUFM V31E2572S Branner 1903 p 312 a b Clague et al 2016 p 259 a b Clague et al 2016 p 254 Clague et al 2016 pp 272 273 a b c Hearty James amp Olson 2005 p 2 a b Hearty James amp Olson 2005 p 3 Hearty James amp Olson 2005 p 10 Hearty James amp Olson 2005 p 15 MacCaughey 1916 p 610 Naughton Lewis amp Gramlich 1971 p 1403 Winchell 1947 p 6 Clague et al 2016 p 275 a b c Crandell 1975 p 1 Crandell 1975 p 8 Crandell 1975 p 9 a b Crandell 1975 p 11 Crandell 1975 p 14 Crandell 1975 p 13 Defense Technical Information Center 1982 p 4 Defense Technical Information Center 1982 p 16 Thomas et al 1979 p 81 Crandell 1975 pp 6 7 Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 Table 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Stearns 1939 p 11 a b c d e f g h i j Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 4 Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 pp 4 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Frey amp Clague 1982 p 451 a b c d e f g h i Stearns 1939 p 12 Naughton Lewis amp Gramlich 1971 p 1401 Ozawa Tagami amp Garcia 2005 p 7 Winchell 1947 p 8 Hay amp Iijima 1968 p 146 a b c d e f g h Crandell 1975 p 6 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 103 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 104 Takasaki amp Mink 1982 p 52 a b Stephens amp Bryan 1993 p 378 a b c Wright amp Jackson 1970 p 411 Morison S E 2001 Breaking the Bismarck s Barrier 22 July 1942 1 May 1944 History of United States Naval Operations in World War II University of Illinois Press pp 194 12 ISBN 978 0 252 06997 0 Siggia Tim December 1984 January 1985 Duty in Hawaii just another day in paradise All Hands no 814 United States Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel p 21 retrieved 2020 05 22 Fisher amp Richardson 1950 p 287 Mokolea National Geologic Map Database USGS Retrieved 14 April 2019 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 120 Hay amp Iijima 1968b p 335 a b c Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 99 Clague et al 2016 p 268 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 101 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 102 Hearty James amp Olson 2005 p 4 Stearns amp Vaksvik 1935 p 121 Winchell 1947 p 7 Sources edit Branner John Casper 1 October 1903 Notes on the geology of the Hawaiian Islands American Journal of Science Series 4 Vol 16 94 301 316 Bibcode 1903AmJS 16 301B doi 10 2475 ajs s4 16 94 301 ISSN 0002 9599 Clague D A Frey F A Yang H J 1 April 2003 Constraints on the Source Components of Lavas Forming the Hawaiian North Arch and Honolulu Volcanics Journal of Petrology 44 4 603 627 Bibcode 2003JPet 44 603Y doi 10 1093 petrology 44 4 603 ISSN 0022 3530 Clague David A Paduan Jennifer B McIntosh William C Cousens Brian L Davis Alice S Reynolds Jennifer R March 2006 A submarine perspective of the Honolulu Volcanics Oahu Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 151 1 3 279 307 Bibcode 2006JVGR 151 279C doi 10 1016 j jvolgeores 2005 07 036 Clague David A Frey Frederick A Garcia Michael O Huang Shichun McWilliams Michael Beeson Melvin H July 2016 Compositional heterogeneity of the Sugarloaf melilite nephelinite flow Honolulu Volcanics Hawai i Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 185 251 277 Bibcode 2016GeCoA 185 251C doi 10 1016 j gca 2016 01 034 Crandell Dwight Raymond 1975 Assessment of volcanic risk on the island of Oahu Hawaii Open File Report Open File Report 75 287 U S Geological Survey doi 10 3133 ofr75287 Dana James Dwight 1 February 1889 Points in the geological history of the islands Maui and Oahu American Journal of Science Series 3 Vol 37 218 81 103 Bibcode 1889AmJS 37 81D doi 10 2475 ajs s3 37 218 81 ISSN 0002 9599 S2CID 131355519 Defense Technical Information Center June 1982 Preliminary Geothermal Evaluation of the Mokapu Peninsula on the Island of Oahu Hawaii Unknown Bibcode 1982pgem rept Archived from the original on 13 April 2019 Doell Richard R 10 April 1972 Paleosecular variation of the Honolulu Volcanic Series Oahu Hawaii Journal of Geophysical Research 77 11 2129 2138 Bibcode 1972JGR 77 2129D doi 10 1029 JB077i011p02129 ISSN 2156 2202 Jicha Brian R Garcia Michael O Lormand Charline 10 January 2023 A possible sea level fall trigger for the youngest rejuvenated volcanism in Hawaiʻi GSA Bulletin doi 10 1130 B36615 1 Fekiacova Z Abouchami W Galer S J G Garcia M O Hofmann A W September 2007 Origin and temporal evolution of Koʻolau Volcano Hawaiʻi Inferences from isotope data on the Koʻolau Scientific Drilling Project KSDP the Honolulu Volcanics and ODP Site 843 Earth and Planetary Science Letters 261 1 2 65 83 doi 10 1016 j epsl 2007 06 005 Fisher Harvey I Richardson Frank 1 July 1950 Birds of Moku Manu and Manana Islands off Oahu Hawaii The Auk Ornithological Advances 67 3 285 306 doi 10 2307 4080918 ISSN 0004 8038 JSTOR 4080918 Frey Frederick A Clague David A 1 August 1982 Petrology and Trace Element Geochemistry of the Honolulu Volcanics Oahu Implications for the Oceanic Mantle below Hawaii Journal of Petrology 23 3 447 504 Bibcode 1982JPet 23 447C doi 10 1093 petrology 23 3 447 ISSN 0022 3530 Garcia Michael O Swanson Kierstin Lormand Charline Norman Marc D April 2022 Petrology of Koko Rift basalts Hawai i s most recent and atypical rejuvenation stage eruptive sequence Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 424 107504 Bibcode 2022JVGR 42407504G doi 10 1016 j jvolgeores 2022 107504 S2CID 246893263 Hay Richard L Iijima A 1 January 1968 Petrology of palagonite tuffs of Koko Craters Oahu Hawaii Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 17 2 141 154 Bibcode 1968CoMP 17 141H doi 10 1007 BF00373206 ISSN 1432 0967 S2CID 129217504 Hay R L Iijima A 1968b Nature and Origin of Palagonite Tuffs of the Honolulu Group on Oahu Hawaii Studies in Volcanology Geological Society of America Memoirs vol 116 Geological Society of America pp 331 376 doi 10 1130 mem116 p331 retrieved 14 April 2019 Hearty P J James Helen F Olson Storrs L 2005 The geological context of Middle Pleistocene crater lake deposits and fossil birds at Ulupau Head Oahu Hawaiian Islands Monografies de la Societat d Historia Natural de les Balears 12 113 128 hdl 10088 213 Herrero Bervera Emilio Valet Jean Pierre November 2002 Paleomagnetic secular variation of the Honolulu Volcanic Series 33 700 ka O ahu Hawaii Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 133 1 4 83 97 Bibcode 2002PEPI 133 83H doi 10 1016 S0031 9201 02 00092 4 Hitchcock C H 1 January 1906 Geology of Diamond head Oahu GSA Bulletin 17 1 469 484 Bibcode 1906GSAB 17 469H doi 10 1130 GSAB 17 469 ISSN 0016 7606 MacCaughey Vaughan 1916 The Punchbowl Honolulu s Metropolitan Volcano The Scientific Monthly 2 6 607 613 Bibcode 1916SciMo 2 607M ISSN 0096 3771 JSTOR 6171 Moberly Ralph Walker George P L 1987 Hill Mason L ed Coastal and volcanic geology of the Hanauma Bay area Oahu Hawaii Cordilleran Section of the Geological Society of America Geological Society of America pp 5 10 doi 10 1130 0 8137 5401 1 5 ISBN 9780813754079 Muhs D R Szabo B J May 1994 New uranium series ages of the Waimanalo Limestone Oahu Hawaii Implications for sea level during the last interglacial period Marine Geology 118 3 4 315 326 Bibcode 1994MGeol 118 315M doi 10 1016 0025 3227 94 90091 4 Naughton John J Lewis Virginia A Gramlich John W 1 May 1971 Potassium Argon Dating of Holocene Basalts of the Honolulu Volcanic Series GSA Bulletin 82 5 1399 1404 Bibcode 1971GSAB 82 1399G doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1971 82 1399 PDOHBO 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0016 7606 O Neil James R Hedge Carl E Jackson Everett D April 1970 Isotopic investigations of xenoliths and host basalts from the Honolulu volcanic series Earth and Planetary Science Letters 8 3 253 257 Bibcode 1970E amp PSL 8 253O doi 10 1016 0012 821X 70 90185 8 Olson E A Easton W H 1 May 1976 Radiocarbon profile of Hanauma Reef Oahu Hawaii GSA Bulletin 87 5 711 719 Bibcode 1976GSAB 87 711E doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1976 87 lt 711 RPOHRO gt 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0016 7606 Ozawa Ayako Tagami Takahiro Garcia Michael O March 2005 Unspiked K Ar dating of the Honolulu rejuvenated and Ko olau shield volcanism on O ahu Hawai i Earth and Planetary Science Letters 232 1 2 1 11 Bibcode 2005E amp PSL 232 1O doi 10 1016 j epsl 2005 01 021 Pollock James B 1928 The amount of the geologically recent negative shift of strand line on Oahu Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 18 3 53 59 ISSN 0043 0439 JSTOR 24522667 Rottas K M Houghton B F 1 September 2012 Structure stratigraphy and eruption dynamics of a young tuff ring Hanauma Bay O 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Bay Oahu Hawaii GSA Bulletin 105 3 377 386 Bibcode 1993GSAB 105 377B doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1993 105 lt 0377 CBFAHB gt 2 3 CO 2 ISSN 0016 7606 Takasaki K J Mink John F 1982 Water resources of southeastern Oahu Hawaii Open File Report doi 10 3133 ofr82628 Thomas D Cox M Erlandson D Kajiwara L 1 June 1979 Potential geothermal resources in Hawaii a preliminary regional survey Phase I final report Report doi 10 2172 5196180 OSTI 5196180 Wentworth C K Hoffmeister J E 1 October 1939 Geology of Ulupau Head Oahu Geological Society of America Bulletin 50 10 1553 1572 Bibcode 1939GSAB 50 1553W doi 10 1130 GSAB 50 1553 ISSN 0016 7606 Winchell Horace 1 January 1947 Honolulu Series Oahu Hawaii GSA Bulletin 58 1 1 48 Bibcode 1947GSAB 58 1W doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1947 58 1 HSOH 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0016 7606 Wright Thomas L Jackson Everett D 1 June 1970 Xenoliths in the Honolulu Volcanic Series Hawaii Journal of Petrology 11 2 405 433 Bibcode 1970JPet 11 405J doi 10 1093 petrology 11 2 405 ISSN 0022 3530 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