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Page 13, results 301 - 325

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Hydrothermal alteration mineralogy of SOH drill holes, Kilauea East Rift Zone geothermal area, Hawaii
Keith E. Bargar, Terry E.C. Keith, Frank A. Trusdell, S.R. Evans, M.L. Sykes
1996, Open-File Report 96-10
Thirty-eight hydrothermal minerals were identified from 356 drill-core specimens that were obtained from three Scientific Observation Holes (SOH-1, SOH-2, and SOH-4) drilled along the lower East Rift Zone (ERZ) of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii. The minerals formed during alteration of basaltic rocks and glass by hot, circulating, waters in aquifers consisting...
A quantitative look at the demise of a basaltic vent: The death of Kupaianaha, Kilauea Volcano, Hawai'i
J. Kauahikaua, M. Mangan, C. Heliker, T. Mattox
1996, Bulletin of Volcanology (57) 641-648
The Kupaianaha vent, the source of the 48th episode of the 1983-to-present Pu'u 'O'o-Kupaianaha eruption, erupted nearly continuously from July 1986 until February 1992. This investigation documents the geophysical and geologic monitoring of the final 10 months of activity at the Kupaianaha vent. Detailed very low frequency (VLF) electromagnetic profiles...
Type of faulting and orientation of stress and strain as a function of space and time in Kilauea's south flank, Hawaii
D. Gillard, M. Wyss, P. Okubo
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 16025-16042
Earthquake focal mechanisms of events occurring between 1972 and 1992 in the south flank of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii, are used to infer the state of stress and strain as a function of time and space. We have determined 870 fault plane solutions from P wave first motion polarities for events with magnitudes ML ≥...
Isotopic evolution of Mauna Kea volcano: Results from the initial phase of the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project
J.C. Lassiter, D.J. DePaolo, M. Tatsumoto
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 11769-11780
We have examined the Sr, Nd, and Pb isotopic compositions of Mauna Kea lavas recovered by the first drilling phase of the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project. These lavas, which range in age from ∼200 to 400 ka, provide a detailed record of chemical and isotopic changes in basalt composition during...
Use of precipitation and groundwater isotopes to interpret regional hydrology on a tropical volcanic island: Kilauea volcano area, Hawaii
M. A. Scholl, S. E. Ingebritsen, C. J. Janik, J. P. Kauahikaua
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 3525-3537
Isotope tracer methods were used to determine flow paths, recharge areas, and relative age for groundwater in the Kilauea volcano area of the Island of Hawaii. A network of up to 66 precipitation collectors was emplaced in the study area and sampled twice yearly for a 3-year period. Stable isotopes...
Mauna Loa lava accumulation rates at the Hilo drill site: Formation of lava deltas during a period of declining overall volcanic growth
P. W. Lipman, J.G. Moore
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 11631-11641
Accumulation rates for lava flows erupted from Mauna Loa, as sampled in the uppermost 280 m of the Hilo drill hole, vary widely for short time intervals (several thousand years), but overall are broadly similar to those documented elsewhere on this volcano since 100 ka. Thickness variations and accumulation rates...
An unusual pattern of recurring seismic quiescence at Kalapana, Hawaii
James H. Dieterich, P. G. Okubo
1996, Geophysical Research Letters (23) 447-450
An unusual pattern of recurring seismic quiescence is observed in the Kalapana, Hawaii region of Kilauea Volcano. Statistically significant intervals of quiescence preceded the Kalapana earthquakes of 1975 (M7.2) and 1989 (M6.1) and a third quiescence is presently underway. The sensitivity of the volcano flank to...
A new model for the emplacement of Columbia River basalts as large, inflated pahoehoe lava flow fields
S. Self, Th. Thordarson, L. Keszthelyi, G.P.L. Walker, K. Hon, M.T. Murphy, P. Long, S. Finnemore
1996, Geophysical Research Letters (23) 2689-2692
Extensive flows of the Columbia River Basalt (CRB) Group in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho are dominantly inflated compound pahoehoe sheet lavas. Early studies recognized that CRB lavas are compound pahoehoe flows, with textures suggesting low flow velocities, but it was thought that the great thickness and extent of the major...
Differentiation and magma mixing on Kilauea's east rift zone: A further look at the eruptions of 1955 and 1960. Part II. The 1960 lavas
T. L. Wright, Rosalind Tuthill Helz
1996, Bulletin of Volcanology (57) 602-630
New and detailed petrographic observations, mineral compositional data, and whole-rock vs glass compositional trends document magma mixing in lavas erupted from Kilauea's lower east rift zone in 1960. Evidence includes the occurrence of heterogeneous phenocryst assemblages, including resorbed and reversely zoned minerals in the lavas inferred to be hybrids. Calculations...
Waters associated with an active basaltic volcano, Kilauea, Hawaii: Variation in solute sources, 1973-1991
R.I. Tilling, B.F. Jones
1996, Geological Society of America Bulletin (108) 562-577
Chemical and isotopic analyses of samples collected from a December 1962-m-deep research borehole at the summit of Kilauea Volcano provide unique time-series data for composition of waters in the uppermost part of its hydrothermal system. These waters have a distinctive geochemical signature: a very low proportion of chloride relative to...
Origin and depositional environment of clastic deposits in the Hilo drill hole, Hawaii
M.H. Beeson, D.A. Clague, J. P. Lockwood
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 11617-11629
Volcaniclastic units cored at depths of about 87, 164, 178, 226, and 246 m below sea level and carbonate units located between depths of 27 and 53 m below sea level in the Hilo drill core were found to be deposited at or near sea level. Four of these units...
An isotope hydrology study of the Kilauea volcano area, Hawaii
M. A. Scholl, S. E. Ingebritsen, C. J. Janik, J. P. Kauahikaua
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4213
Isotope tracer methods were used to determine flow paths, recharge areas, and relative age for ground water in the Kilauea volcano area on the Island of Hawaii. Stable isotopes in rainfall show three distinct isotopic gradients with elevation, which are correlated with trade-wind, rain shadow, and high-elevation climatological patterns. Temporal...
Images of Kilauea East Rift Zone eruption, 1983-1993
Taeko Jane Takahashi, C. C. Abston, C. C. Heliker
1995, Data Series 24
This CD-ROM disc contains 475 scanned photographs from the U.S. Geological Survey Hawaii Observatory Library. The collection represents a comprehensive range of the best photographic images of volcanic phenomena for Kilauea's East Rift eruption, which continues as of September 1995. Captions of the images present information on location, geologic feature...
Total and non-seasalt sulfate and chloride measured in bulk precipitation samples from the Kilauea Volcano area, Hawaii
M. A. Scholl, S. E. Ingebritsen
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4001
Six-month cumulative precipitation samples provide estimates of bulk deposition of sulfate and chloride for the southeast part of the Island of Hawaii during four time periods: August 1991 to February 1992, February 1992 to September 1992, March 1993 to September 1993, and September 1993 to February 1994. Total estimated bulk...
Rapid deformation of the south flank of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
S. Owen, P. Segall, Jeffrey T. Freymueller, Asta Mikijus, R. Denlinger, T. Arnadottir, M. Sako, R. Burgmann
1995, Science (267) 1328-1332
The south flank of Kilauea volcano has experienced two large [magnitude (M) 7.2 and M 6.1] earthquakes in the past two decades. Global Positioning System measurements conducted between 1990 and 1993 reveal seaward displacements of Kilauea's central south flank at rates of up to about 10 centimeters per year. In contrast, the...
Petrology of Submarine Lavas from Kilauea's Puna Ridge, Hawaii
D. A. Clague, James G. Moore, J.E. Dixon, W.B. Friesen
1995, Journal of Petrology (36) 299-349
We have studied 30 quenched tholeiitic lava flows recovered by 20 dredge hauls and one submersible dive along Puna Ridge, the submarine part of the East Rift Zone of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii Glass grains from numerous additional flows were recovered in turbidite sands cored in the Hawaiian Trough. These quenched...
Hydrogen and oxygen isotopic compositions of waters from fumaroles at Kilauea summit, Hawaii
T. K. Hinkley, J. E. Quick, R. T. Gregory, T.M. Gerlach
1995, Bulletin of Volcanology (57) 44-51
Condensate samples were collected in 1992 from a high-temperature (300° C) fumarole on the floor of the Halemaumau Pit Crater at Kilauea. The emergence about two years earlier of such a hot fumarole was unprecedented at such a central location at Kilauea. The condensates have hydrogen and oxygen isotopic compositions...
Factors influencing the height of Hawaiian lava fountains: implications for the use of fountain height as an indicator of magma gas content
E.A. Parfitt, L. Wilson, C.A. Neal
1995, Bulletin of Volcanology (57) 440-450
The heights of lava fountains formed in Hawaiian-style eruptions are controlled by magma gas content, volume flux and the amounts of lava re-entrainment and gas bubble coalescence. Theoretical models of lava fountaining are used to analyse data on lava fountain height variations collected during the 1983–1986 Pu'u 'O'o vent...
The Uwekahuna Ash Member of the Puna Basalt: product of violent phreatomagmatic eruptions at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii, between 2800 and 2100 14C years ago
D. Dzurisin, J. P. Lockwood, T. J. Casadevall, M. Rubin
1995, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (66) 163-184
Kilauea volcano's reputation for relatively gentle effusive eruptions belies a violent geologic past, including several large phreatic and phreatomagmatic eruptions that are recorded by Holocene pyroclastic deposits which mantle Kilauea's summit area and the southeast flank of adjacent Mauna Loa volcano. The most widespread of these deposits is the Uwekahuna...
The Stillwater Complex, Montana: a subvolcanic magma chamber?
Rosalind Tuthill Helz
1995, American Mineralogist (80) 1343-1346
Five magma types occur as sills in the footwall of the Stillwater Complex, all of them coeval with the Stillwater Complex, all of them coeval with the Stillwater in age. Two of the magma types have compositions that suggest they are similar to the magmas from which the cumulates of...
Episode 49 of the Pu'u 'Ō'ō-Kūpaianaha eruption of Kilauea volcano-breakdown of a steady-state eruptive era
M. T. Mangan, C. C. Heliker, T. N. Mattox, J. P. Kauahikaua, Rosalind Tuthill Helz
1995, Bulletin of Volcanology (57) 127-135
The Pu'u 'O'o-Kupaianaha eruption (1983-present) is the longest lived rift eruption of either Kilauea or neighboring Mauna Loa in recorded history. The initial fissure opening in January 1983 was followed by three years of episodic fire fountaining at the Pu'u 'O'o vent on Kilauea's east rift zone ∼19km from the...
Fluid-inclusion evidence for past temperature fluctuations in the Kilauea East Rift Zone geothermal area, Hawaii
Keith E. Bargar, Terry E.C. Keith, Frank A. Trusdell
1995, Geothermics (24) 639-659
Heating and freezing data were obtained for fluid inclusions in hydrothermal quartz, calcite, and anhydrite from several depths in three scientific observation holes drilled along the lower East Rift Zone of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii. Compositions of the inclusion fluids range from dilute meteoric water to highly modified sea water concentrated...