Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Kauai geology: Nothing's where you think it is
Was Kaua`i formed by one or two volcanoes, and if it’s one, was
its center was near the Alakai Swamp?
The newest and best answer seems to be
one volcano—and the Alakai Swamp is not its center.
Researchers studying gravity anomalies appear to have
answered a troubling geological question: how to make sense of the geological
history of an island that’s been eroding for 5 million years, leaving a
confusing array of ridges, cliffs, bogs and craters.
Three University of Hawai`i scientists, Ashton F. Flinders, Garrett Ito and Michael O.
Garcia, all of the university’s Department of Geology and Geophysics, used gravity data to
take another look.
Their 2010 paper in the Journal of Geophysical Research, which
we came across recently, discusses the gravity fields in the Kaua`i-Ni`ihau
area.
Since the dense rock of a volcanic core—a solidified magma
reservoir—can create a higher gravity reading, they were able to identify what
appear to be the centers of the ancient volcanoes of Kaua`i County.
The essence of their findings is this: Kaua`i was formed of
a single volcano, whose center was under what’s currently known as the Lihue
Basin. It is generally in the middle of an area bounded by the Hā`upu range to
the south, the Kahili-Wai`ale`ale cliffs to the west, the Makaleha Mountains to
the north and the Kalepa Ridge to the east. What happened to the old volcanic
peak? “The summit of the volcano was likely removed by extensive mass wasting
and/or erosion.”
That volcanic center is six miles east of the Alakai Swamp
region, which many experts had assumed marked the center—the geologically
mapped caldera. “This offset suggests that the mapped caldera is a collapsed
feature later filled in with lava and not the long‐term center of Kaua’i shield
volcanism.”
The data was collected using more than 300 land
measurements, which were added to work performed on Kaua`i gravity anomalies in
1965.
In another bit of interesting data,
they identified a second area of high gravity in the middle of the channel
between Kaua`i and Ni`ihau, which they say is likely the heart of the older
Ni`ihau volcano. Its center lies about 8 miles toward Kaua`i from Paniau, the
highest point on remnant Ni`ihau.
The island of Ni`ihau is a remnant of that volcano, most of
whose eastern side was covered by Kaua`i lavas. The underwater gravity survey
was performed using University of Hawai’i’s R/V Kilo Moana.
The geology of the islands has been challenging, in part
because of their age and degree of erosion, the authors say: “Extensive mass
wasting, erosion, and subsidence have obscured the extent, shape, and centers
of their original shield volcanoes.”
There remain plenty of questions for geologists to answer,
particularly about the association of these two islands, and whether they are
both part of a single volcanic rift that had two significant centers of
volcanism—one forming Niihau and the second later forming Kaua`i.
“The overall trend of these features from eastern Ni’ihau,
through the Kaulakahi Channel, and inland to western Kaua’i, combined with the
elongate trend of the residual gravity, supports previous interpretations of a
long volcanic rift zone, the Mana ridge, passing through the present locations
of both islands. Yet, whether this feature is an extension of the Ni’ihau
volcanic center... a rift zone radiating away from Ni’ihau similar to Lō’ihi’s
rift system , a shared rift zone fed by either shield volcanoes or a separate
and entirely unrelated feature, remains unresolved,” the authors say.
There are also multiple questions and theories about the
formation of the vast plateau that forms the Alakai, which has been called the
world’s highest-elevation swamp, and which is a center for biodiversity in the
Islands.
One theory is that the Alakai , which is a part of features called the
Olokele Volcanics, does represent the ancient Kaua`i caldera, and that it was
fed at an angle by a volcanic center many miles to the east. But there is no Hawaiian volcano
with so great an offset between the magma center and the caldera.
Another theory is that “the Olokele feature formed late in
the shield stage and is not part of Kaua’i’s long‐term center of volcanism.”
As to the theory of whether there could have been two volcanoes for
Kaua`i, one creating the Lihue basin and the other creating the Olokele
features of West Kaua`i?
“We found no indications in either the surface gravity
mapping or the inverted density structure to support the hypothesis that Kaua’i
was formed by two sequentially buttressed shield volcanoes, each having a
separate magma supply system.”
Another question is whether Kaua`i and Ni`ihau were ever
connected above the surface of the sea. The authors say they were not—that Ni`ihau
had already started a significant erosion trend before it encountered the
Kaua`i lavas. And the summit of Ni`ihau may have been destroyed in a massive
collapse of the island’s eastern flank.
Citation: Flinders, A. F., G. Ito, and M. O. Garcia (2010),
Gravity anomalies of the Northern Hawaiian Islands: Implications on the shield
evolutions of Kauai and Niihau, J. Geophys. Res., 115, B08412,
doi:10.1029/2009JB006877
© Jan TenBruggencate 2012
Posted by Jan T at 9:59 AM
Labels: Geology, Marine Issues, Physics, Volcanoes
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2 comments:
Nice article. Although as for the existence of the Alaka'i, it seems to me to be the flattened remnant of what use to be buried under glacial episodes, perhaps more than 1. The Waimea Canyon is indicative of glacial run off. It is my belief that Kauai was a massive volcano to which Niihau represented a western range much like the Waianae to Koola'us on oahu. Kauai's Basin was the crater that represents the Lihue area, and if you look closely you can see a rather nice ring of mountains surrounding the lihue area which composes the crater wall, which experienced explosive episodes flying Kauai rocks to the coast of Oahu. I think Kauai and Niihau was joined above water for quite sometime. The Mana Plain also represents the existence of rapid glacial melting. Just my take.
Nice article. Although as for the existence of the Alaka'i, it seems to me to be the flattened remnant of what use to be buried under glacial episodes, perhaps more than 1. The Waimea Canyon is indicative of glacial run off. It is my belief that Kauai was a massive volcano to which Niihau represented a western range much like the Waianae to Koola'us on oahu. Kauai's Basin was the crater that represents the Lihue area, and if you look closely you can see a rather nice ring of mountains surrounding the lihue area which composes the crater wall, which experienced explosive episodes flying Kauai rocks to the coast of Oahu. I think Kauai and Niihau was joined above water for quite sometime. The Mana Plain also represents the existence of rapid glacial melting. Just my take.
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