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Native gold in Hawaiian alkalic magma
T. W. Sisson
2003, Economic Geology (98) 643-648
Native gold found in fresh basanite glass from the early submarine phase of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii, may be the first documented case of the transport of gold as a distinct precious metal phase in a mantle-derived magma. The gold-bearing glass is a grain in bedded volcanic glass sandstone (Japan Marine Science and Technology Center (JAMSTEC) sample S508-R3) collected by the submersible Shinkai...
Kilauea east rift zone magmatism: An episode 54 perspective
C.R. Thornber, C. Heliker, D. R. Sherrod, J. P. Kauahikaua, Asta Mikijus, P. G. Okubo, F. A. Trusdell, J. R. Budahn, W.I. Ridley, G.P. Meeker
2003, Journal of Petrology (44) 1525-1559
On January 29 30, 1997, prolonged steady-state effusion of lava from Pu'u'O'o was briefly disrupted by shallow extension beneath Napau Crater, 1 4 km uprift of the active Kilauea vent. A 23-h-long eruption (episode 54) ensued from fissures that were overlapping or en echelon with eruptive fissures formed during episode 1 in 1983 and those...
Shallow-velocity models at the Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, determined from array analyses of tremor wavefields
G. Saccorotti, B. Chouet, P. Dawson
2003, Geophysical Journal International (152) 633-648
The properties of the surface wavefield at Kilauea Volcano are analysed using data from small-aperture arrays of short-period seismometers deployed in and around the Kilauea caldera. Tremor recordings were obtained during two Japan-US cooperative experiments conducted in 1996 and 1997. The seismometers were deployed in three semi-circular arrays with apertures...
Gaussian statistics for palaeomagnetic vectors
Jeffrey J. Love, C.G. Constable
2003, Geophysical Journal International (152) 515-565
With the aim of treating the statistics of palaeomagnetic directions and intensities jointly and consistently, we represent the mean and the variance of palaeomagnetic vectors, at a particular site and of a particular polarity, by a probability density function in a Cartesian three-space of orthogonal magnetic-field components consisting of a...
Mantle fault zone beneath Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
C.J. Wolfe, P. G. Okubo, P.M. Shearer
2003, Science (300) 478-480
Relocations and focal mechanism analyses of deep earthquakes (???13 kilometers) at Kilauea volcano demonstrate that seismicity is focused on an active fault zone at 30-kilometer depth, with seaward slip on a low-angle plane, and other smaller, distinct fault zones. The earthquakes we have analyzed predominantly reflect tectonic faulting in the...
Location of long-period events below Kilauea Volcano using seismic amplitudes and accurate relative relocation
J. Battaglia, J.-L. Got, P. Okubo
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
We present methods for improving the location of long-period (LP) events, deep and shallow, recorded below Kilauea Volcano by the permanent seismic network. LP events might be of particular interest to understanding eruptive processes as their source mechanism is assumed to directly involve fluid transport. However, it is usually difficult...
New insights into Kilauea's volcano dynamics brought by large-scale relative relocation of microearthquakes
J.-L. Got, P. Okubo
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
We investigated the microseismicity recorded in an active volcano to infer information concerning the volcano structure and long-term dynamics, by using relative relocations and focal mechanisms of microearthquakes. There were 32,000 earthquakes of the Mauna Loa and Kilauea volcanoes recorded by more than eight stations of the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory...
Elevation effects in volcano applications of the COSPEC
T.M. Gerlach
2003, Geological Society Special Publication 169-175
Volcano applications commonly involve sizeable departures from the reference pressure and temperature of COSPEC calibration cells. Analysis shows that COSPEC SO2 column abundances and derived mass emission rates are independent of pressure and temperature, and thus unaffected by elevation effects related to deviations from calibration cell reference state. However, path-length...
Infrasonic tremor observed at Kilauea Volcano, Hawai'i
M. Garces, A. Harris, C. Hetzer, J. Johnson, S. Rowland, E. Marchetti, P. Okubo
2003, Geophysical Research Letters (30)
[1] Infrasonic array data collected at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i, during November 12–21, 2002 indicate that the active vents and lava tube system near the Pu'u 'Ō'ō vent complex emit almost continuous infrasound in the 0.3–10 Hz frequency band. The spectral content of these infrasonic signals matches well that of synchronous...
Sulfur dioxide emission rates from Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, an update: 1998-2001
Tamar Elias, A. Jefferson Sutton
2002, Open-File Report 2002-460
Introduction Sulfur dioxide (SO2) emission rates from Kilauea Volcano were first measured by Stoiber and Malone (1975) and have been measured on a regular basis since 1979 (Greenland and others, 1985; Casadevall and others, 1987; Elias and others, 1998; Sutton and others, 2001). A compilation of SO2 emission-rate and wind-vector...
Ancestral submarine growth of Kïlauea Volcano and instability of its south flank
Peter W. Lipman, Thomas W. Sisson, Tadahide Ui, Jiro Naka, John R. Smith
2002, Book chapter, Hawaiian volcanoes: Deep underwater perspectives
Joint Japan-USA cruises in 1998-99 explored and sampled the previously unstudied deep offshore region south of Kilauea. Bathymetric features, dive observations, and recovered samples indicate that the 3-km-deep mid-slope bench, bounded seaward by a 2-km-high lower scarp, is underlain by massive turbidite sandstone and interbedded debris-flow breccia. Debris-flow clasts are...
Deep-sea volcaniclastic sedimentation around the southern flank of Hawaii
Jiro Naka, Toshiya Kanamatsu, Peter W. Lipman, Thomas W. Sisson, Nohiro Tsuboyama, Julia K. Morgan, John R. Smith, Tadahide Ui
2002, Book chapter, Hawaiian Volcanoes: Deep Underwater Perspectives
Most slopes of the Hilina slump are steep, but local small benches, mantled by volcaniclastic sand and fine sediments, were sampled in 1998-1999 with ROV KAIKO and DSRV SHINKAI 6500. Most surficial glass sands on the Hilina slump have compositions of subaerially erupted Kilauea lava, which fragmented and quenched as...
Emplacement and inflation structures of submarine and subaerial pahoehoe lavas from Hawaii
Susumu Umino, Sumie Obata, Peter W. Lipman, John R. Smith, Tsugio Shibata, Jiro Naka, Frank A. Trusdell
2002, Book chapter, Hawaiian Volcanoes: Deep Underwater Perspectives
Features of subaerial pahoehoe tumuli from Kilauea and Mauna Loa Volcanoes in Hawaii and subaqueous flow lobes from Loihi Seamount off Hawaii and north of Oahu Island document the controlling factors of flow-lobe formation. Studied subaerial flow-lobe tumuli consist of uplifted pahoehoe crust, formed from coalesced flow lobes. The south...
Submarine landslides and volcanic features on Kohala and Mauna Kea volcanoes and the Hana Ridge, Hawaii
J.R. Smith, Satake Kenji, J.K. Morgan, Peter W. Lipman
2002, Book chapter, Hawaiian Volcanoes: Deep Underwater Perspectives
The deep submarine eastern flanks of Mauna Kea, Kohala, and Haleakala volcanoes were mapped for the first time with a multibeam bathymetric and sidescan sonar system during joint Japan-US cruises aboard the JAMSTEC vessel R/V Yokosuka in 1999. The Pololu slump off northeast Kohala is overlain by a carbonate platform...
Whole-rock and glass major-element geochemistry of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, near-vent eruptive products: September 1994 through September 2001
Carl R. Thornber, David R. Sherrod, David F. Siems, Christina C. Heliker, Gregory P. Meeker, Robert L. Oscarson, James P. Kauahikaua
2002, Open-File Report 2002-17
This report presents major-element geochemical data for glasses and whole-rock aliquots among 523 lava samples collected near the vent on Kilauea's east rift zone between September 1994 and October 2001. Information on sample collection, analysis techniques and analytical standard reproducibility are presented as a PDF file, which also includes a...
Episodic thermal perturbations associated with groundwater flow: An example from Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
S. Hurwitz, S. E. Ingebritsen, M.L. Sorey
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (107) ECV 13-1-ECV 13-10
Temperature measurements in deep drill holes on volcano summits or upper flanks allow a quantitative analysis of groundwater induced heat transport within the edifice. We present a new temperature-depth profile from a deep well on the summit of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, and analyze it in conjunction with a temperature profile...
Identifying elements of the plumbing system beneath Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, from the source locations of very-long-period signals
J. Almendros, B. Chouet, P. Dawson, T. Bond
2002, Geophysical Journal International (148) 303-312
We analyzed 16 seismic events recorded by the Hawaiian broad-band seismic network at Kilauca Volcano during the period September 9-26, 1999. Two distinct types of event are identified based on their spectral content, very-long-period (VLP) waveform, amplitude decay pattern and particle motion. We locate the VLP signals with a method...
The 12 September 1999 Upper East Rift Zone dike intrusion at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
Peter Cervelli, P. Segall, F. Amelung, H. Garbeil, C. Meertens, S. Owen, Asta Mikijus, M. Lisowski
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (107) ECV 3-1-ECV 3-13
Deformation associated with an earthquake swarm on 12 September 1999 in the Upper East Rift Zone of Kilauea Volcano was recorded by continuous GPS receivers and by borehole tiltmeters. Analyses of campaign GPS, leveling data, and interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data from the ERS-2 satellite also reveal significant deformation...
Distinguishing palagonitized from pedogenically-altered basaltic Hawaiian tephra: Mineralogical and geochemical criteria
Peter Schiffmant, R.J. Southard, D. D. Eberl, J.L. Bishop
2002, Geological Society Special Publication 393-405
Palagonitization is a common, but imperfectly defined process that greatly modifies the physical and chemical properties of glassy basaltic tephra deposited in subaquatic/subglacial environments on Earth and perhaps Mars. It also results in textures and mineralogies that are distinct from other forms of (mainly pedogenic) low temperature alteration. Specifically, the...
Sun photometer and lidar measurements of the plume from the Hawaii Kilauea Volcano Pu'u O'o vent: Aerosol flux and SO2 lifetime
J.N. Porter, K.A. Horton, P. J. Mouginis-Mark, B. Lienert, S.K. Sharma, E. Lau, T. Elias, A. J. Sutton, C. Oppenheimer
2002, Geophysical Research Letters (29) 30-1-30-4
Aerosol optical depths and lidar measurements were obtained under the plume of Hawaii Kilauea Volcano on August 17, 2001, ∼9 km downwind from the erupting Pu'u O'o vent. Measured aerosol optical depths (at 500 nm) were between 0.2–0.4. Aerosol size distributions inverted from the spectral sun photometer measurements suggest the...
Mapping the sources of the seismic wave field at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii, using data recorded on multiple seismic Antennas
J. Almendros, B. Chouet, P. Dawson, Caleb G. Huber
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 2333-2351
Seismic antennas constitute a powerful tool for the analysis of complex wave fields. Well-designed antennas can identify and separate components of a complex wave field based on their distinct propagation properties. The combination of several antennas provides the basis for a more complete understanding of volcanic wave fields, including an...
Gas geochemistry of the Valles caldera region, New Mexico and comparisons with gases at Yellowstone, Long Valley and other geothermal systems
F. Goff, C. J. Janik
2002, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (116) 299-323
Noncondensible gases from hot springs, fumaroles, and deep wells within the Valles caldera geothermal system (210-300??C) consist of roughly 98.5 mo1% CO2, 0.5 mol% H2S, and 1 mol% other components. 3He/4He ratios indicate a deep magmatic source (R/Ra up to 6) whereas ??13C-CO2 values (-3 to -5???) do not discriminate...