'Hualālai' is the third-most historically active
shield volcano on the
Island of Hawaii in the
Hawaiian Islands. Its peak is at 8,271 ft (2,521 m) above sea level. Hualālai lies more or less due west of the saddle between the much taller
Mauna Kea and
Mauna Loa mountains, and forms the backdrop to the town of
Kailua-Kona. In fact, the town is built on the southwestern slope of this mountain, where most of the world famous
Kona coffee is grown.
Structure
Hualālai is built from a well-defined
rift zone that trends approximately N50°W across its summit and a less well-defined rift zone that trends northward from a point 3 mi east of the summit (Macdonald and Abbott, 1970). The oldest dated rocks on the mountain surface are about 128,000 years before present (0.1 MYA). It is estimated that the volcano appeared above sea level some 300,000 years ago (0.3 MYA; USGS).
Over 100 cinder and spatter
cones are arranged along the rift zones. There is no summit
caldera, just a collapse
crater (~ 0.3 mile across) at the top of a small lava shield. Much of the southern slope (above the town of Kailua-Kona) consists of lava flows covered by a layer of
volcanic ash from 10 cm (a few inches) to a meter (3 ft) thick. Hualālai appears to have entered the late stage of the eruptive cycle of Hawaiian volcanoes
[2]—the 'post-shield' stage
.
Recent eruptions
Six vents erupted lava between the late 1700s and 1801, two of which generated lava flows that poured into the sea along the west coast of the island. The
Keahole Airport, located only 11 km (7 mi) north of Kailua-Kona, is built atop the smaller ''Huehue'' flow (1801) just north of 'Keahole Point'
[3].
Although Hualālai is not nearly as active as nearby
Mauna Loa or
Kīlauea, recent geologic mapping of the volcano shows that 80 percent of the mountain surface is covered by lava flows no older than about 5,000 years. In the past few decades, when most of the resorts, homes, and commercial buildings were built on the flanks of Hualālai, earthquake activity beneath the volcano has been low. In 1929, however, an intense swarm of earthquakes lasting more than a month was most likely caused by magma rising to near the surface. For these reasons, Hualālai is considered a potentially dangerous volcano that is likely to erupt again sometime in the next 100 years
.
References
1.
2.
3. Fishponds versus lavaflows
External link
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