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...
Volcanism in national parks: summary of the workshop convened by the U.S. Geological Survey and National Park Service, 26-29 September 2000, Redding, California
Steven R. Brantley, Lindsay McClelland
Marianne Guffanti, editor(s)
2001, Open-File Report 2001-435
Spectacular volcanic scenery and features were the inspiration for creating many of our national parks and monuments and continue to enhance the visitor experience today (Table 1). At the same time, several of these parks include active and potentially active volcanoes that could pose serious hazards - earthquakes, mudflows, and...
Maps showing the development of the Pu‘u ‘Ö‘ö-Küpaianaha flow field, June 1984-February 1987, Kïlauea Volcano, Hawaii
Christina Heliker, George E. Ulrich, Sandy C. Margriter, John P. Hoffmann
2001, IMAP 2685
The Pu'u 'O'o - Kupaianaha eruption on the middle east rift zone of Kilauea began in January 1983 with intermittent activity along several fissures. By June 1983, the eruption had localized at the Pu'u 'O'o vent, and the activity settled into an increasingly regular pattern of brief eruptive episodes characterized...
Implications for eruptive processes as indicated by sulfur dioxide emissions from Kilauea Volcano, Hawai'i, 1979-1997
A. J. Sutton, T. Elias, T.M. Gerlach, J. B. Stokes
2001, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (108) 283-302
Kı̄lauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, currently hosts the longest running SO2 emission-rate data set on the planet, starting with initial surveys done in 1975 by Stoiber and his colleagues. The 17.5-year record of summit emissions, starting in 1979, shows the effects of summit and east rift eruptive processes, which define seven distinctly...
P-wave velocity structure of the uppermost mantle beneath Hawaii from traveltime tomography
F.J. Tilmann, H.M. Benz, K.F. Priestley, P. G. Okubo
2001, Geophysical Journal International (146) 594-606
We examine the P-wave velocity structure beneath the island of Hawaii using P-wave residuals from teleseismic earthquakes recorded by the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory seismic network. The station geometry and distribution of events makes it possible to image the velocity structure between ~ 40 and 100 km depth with a lateral...
Constraints on dike propagation from continuous GPS measurements
P. Segall, Peter Cervelli, S. Owen, M. Lisowski, Asta Mikijus
2001, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (106) 19301-19317
The January 1997 East Rift Zone eruption on Kilauea volcano, Hawaii, occurred within a network of continuous Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers. The GPS measurements reveal the temporal history of deformation during dike intrusion, beginning ∼8 hours prior to the onset of the eruption. The dike volume as a function...
Volcano monitoring using the Global Positioning System: Filtering strategies
K.M. Larson, Peter Cervelli, M. Lisowski, Asta Mikijus, P. Segall, S. Owen
2001, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (106) 19453-19464
Permanent Global Positioning System (GPS) networks are routinely used for producing improved orbits and monitoring secular tectonic deformation. For these applications, data are transferred to an analysis center each day and routinely processed in 24-hour segments. To use GPS for monitoring volcanic events, which may last only a few hours,...
Wavefield properties of a shallow long-period event and tremor at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
G. Saccorotti, B. Chouet, P. Dawson
2001, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (109) 163-189
The wavefields of tremor and a long-period (LP) event associated with the ongoing eruptive activity at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, are investigated using a combination of dense small-aperture (300 m) and sparse large-aperture (5 km) arrays deployed in the vicinity of the summit caldera. Measurements of azimuth and slowness for tremor...
Anomalously high b-values in the South Flank of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii: Evidence for the distribution of magma below Kilauea's East rift zone
M. Wyss, F. Klein, K. Nagamine, S. Wiemer
2001, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (106) 23-37
The pattern of b-value of the frequency-magnitude relation, or mean magnitude, varies little in the Kaoiki-Hilea area of Hawaii, and the b-values are normal, with b = 0.8 in the top 10 km and somewhat lower values below that depth. We interpret the Kaoiki-Hilea area as relatively stable, normal Hawaiian...
Rapid fluid disruption: A source for self-potential anomalies on volcanoes
M.J.S. Johnston, J.D. Byerlee, D. Lockner
2001, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (106) 4327-4335
Self-potential (SP) anomalies observed above suspected magma reservoirs, dikes, etc., on various volcanoes (Kilauea, Hawaii; Mount Unzen, Japan; Piton de la Fournaise, Reunion Island, Miyake Jima, Japan) result from transient surface electric fields of tens of millivolts per kilometer and generally have a positive polarity. These SP anomalies are usually...
Olivine-liquid relations of lava erupted by Kilauea volcano from 1994 to 1998: Implications for shallow magmatic processes associated with the ongoing east-rift-zone eruption
Carl R. Thornber
2001, Canadian Mineralogist (39) 239-266
From 1994 through 1998, the eruption of Kîlauea, in Hawai’i, was dominated by steady-state effusion at Pu‘u ‘Ô‘ô that was briefly disrupted by an eruption 4 km uprift at Nāpau Crater on January 30, 1997. In this paper, I describe the systematic relations of whole-rock, glass, olivine, and olivine-inclusion compositions...
Spatial extent of a hydrothermal system at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, determined from array analyses of shallow long-period seismicity 1. Method
J. Almendros, B. Chouet, P. Dawson
2001, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (106) 13565-13580
We present a probabilistic method to locate the source of seismic events using seismic antennas. The method is based on a comparison of the event azimuths and slownesses derived from frequency-slowness analyses of array data, with a slowness vector model. Several slowness vector models are considered including both homogeneous and...
Spatial extent of a hydrothermal system at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, determined from array analyses of shallow long-period seismicity 2. Results
J. Almendros, B. Chouet, P. Dawson
2001, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (106) 13581-13597
Array data from a seismic experiment carried out at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, in February 1997, are analyzed by the frequency-slowness method. The slowness vectors are determined at each of three small-aperture seismic antennas for the first arrivals of 1129 long-period (LP) events and 147 samples of volcanic tremor. The source...
Trends in long-period seismicity related to magmatic fluid compositions
M.M. Morrissey, B. A. Chouet
2001, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (108) 265-281
Sound speeds and densities are calculated for three different types of fluids: gas-gas mixture; ash-gas mixture; and bubbly liquid. These fluid properties are used to calculate the impedance contrast (Z) and crack stiffness (C) in the fluid-driven crack model (Chouet: J. Geophys. Res., 91 (1986) 13,967; 101 (1988) 4375; A...
Catalog of Hawaiian earthquakes, 1823-1959
Fred W. Klein, Thomas L. Wright
2000, Professional Paper 1623
This catalog of more than 17,000 Hawaiian earthquakes (of magnitude greater than or equal to 5), principally located on the Island of Hawaii, from 1823 through the third quarter of 1959 is designed to expand our ability to evaluate seismic hazard in Hawaii, as well as our knowledge of Hawaiian...
Formation of submarine flat-topped volcanic cones in Hawai'i
D. Clague, James G. Moore, J.R. Reynolds
2000, Bulletin of Volcanology (62) 214-233
High-resolution bathymetric mapping has shown that submarine flat-topped volcanic cones, morphologically similar to ones on the deep sea floor and near mid-ocean ridges, are common on or near submarine rift zones of Kilauea, Kohala (or Mauna Kea), Mahukona, and Haleakala volcanoes. Four flat-topped cones on Kohala were explored and sampled...
Comment on 'Volume of magma accumulation or withdrawal estimated from surface uplift or subsidence, with application to the 1960 collapse of Kilauea volcano' by P.T. Delaney and D.F. McTigue
Daniel J. Johnson, F. Sigmundsson, P.T. Delaney
2000, Bulletin of Volcanology (61) 491-493
In volcanoes that store a significant quantity of magma within a subsurface summit reservoir, such as Kilauea, bulk compression of stored magma is an important mode of deformation. Accumulation of magma is also accompanied by crustal deformation, usually manifested at the surface as uplift. These two modes of deformation -...
The use of earthquake rate changes as a stress meter at Kilauea volcano
J. Dieterich, V. Cayol, P. Okubo
2000, Nature (408) 457-460
Stress changes in the Earth's crust are generally estimated from model calculations that use near-surface deformation as an observational constraint. But the widespread correlation of changes of earthquake activity with stress has led to suggestions that stress changes might be calculated from earthquake occurrence rates obtained from seismicity catalogues. Although...
In search of ancestral Kilauea volcano
P. W. Lipman, T. W. Sisson, T. Ui, J. Naka
2000, Geology (28) 1079-1082
Submersible observations and samples show that the lower south flank of Hawaii, offshore from Kilauea volcano and the active Hilina slump system, consists entirely of compositionally diverse volcaniclastic rocks; pillow lavas are confined to shallow slopes. Submarine-erupted basalt clasts have strongly variable alkalic and transitional basalt compositions (to 41% SiO2,...
High magma storage rates before the 1983 eruption of Kilauea, Hawaii
V. Cayol, James H. Dieterich, A.T. Okamura, Asta Mikijus
2000, Science (288) 2343-2346
After a magnitude 7.2 earthquake in 1975 and before the start of the ongoing eruption in 1983, deformation of Kilauea volcano was the most rapid ever recorded. Three-dimensional numerical modeling shows that this deformation is consistent with the dilation of a dike within Kilauea's rift zones coupled with creep over...
January 30, 1997 eruptive event on Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, as monitored by continuous GPS
S. Owen, P. Segall, M. Lisowski, Asta Mikijus, M. Murray, M. Bevis, J. Foster
2000, Geophysical Research Letters (27) 2757-2760
A continuous Global Positioning System (GPS) network on Kilauea Volcano captured the most recent fissure eruption in Kilauea's East Rift Zone (ERZ) in unprecedented spatial and temporal detail. The short eruption drained the lava pond at Pu'u O' o, leading to a two month long pause in its on-going eruption....
Magma migration and resupply during the 1974 summit eruptions of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
John P. Lockwood, Robert I. Tilling, Robin T. Holcomb, Fred W. Klein, Arnold T. Okamura, Donald W. Peterson
1999, Professional Paper 1613
The purpose of this paper is to present a complete account of contrasting yet related eruptions, thus filling a gap in the published narratives of recent activity of Kilauea; and to examine their significance within a broader context of regional magmatic and eruptive dynamics. We have gained a historical perspective...
Explosive eruptions at Kilauea Volcano, Hawai'i?
Larry G. Mastin, Robert L. Christiansen, Donald A. Swanson, Peter H. Stauffer, James W. Hendley II
1999, Fact Sheet 132-98
No abstract available....
Metal emissions from Kilauea, and a suggested revision of the estimated worldwide metal output by quiescent degassing of volcanoes
T. K. Hinkley, P. J. Lamothe, S. A. Wilson, David L. Finnegan, T.M. Gerlach
1999, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (170) 315-325
Measurements of a large suite of metals (Pb, Cd, Cu, Zn and several others) and sulfur at Kilauea volcano over an extended period of time has yielded a detailed record of the atmospheric injection of ordinarily-rare metals from this quiescently degassing volcano, representative of an important type. We have combined...
The absence of lithium isotope fractionation during basalt differentiation: New measurements by multicollector sector ICP-MS
P.B. Tomascak, F. Tera, Rosalind Tuthill Helz, R.J. Walker
1999, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (63) 907-910
We report measurements of the isotopic composition of lithium in basalts using a multicollector magnetic sector plasma-source mass spectrometer (MC-ICP-MS). This is the first application of this analytical technique to Li isotope determination. External precision of multiple replicate and duplicate measurements for a variety of sample types averages ±1.1‰ (2σ...