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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Demography and movements of the omao (Myadestes obscurus)
C.J. Ralph, S.G. Fancy
1994, Condor (96) 503-511
Density, age-specific survival, timing of breeding and molting, and movements of the Omao or Hawaiian Thrush (Myadestes obscurus) were studied at four sites on the island of Hawaii. Mean monthly density (birds/ha) was 3.23 +- 0.57, 1.07 +- 0.33, 3.23 +- 0. 16, and 3.74 +- 0.36 at Kau Forest,...
Demography and movements of the endangered akepa and Hawaii creeper
C.J. Ralph, S.G. Fancy
1994, The Wilson Bulletin (106) 615-628
We studied populations of the endangered Akepa (Loxops coccineus coccineus) and Hawaii Creeper (Oreomystis mana) at four sites on the island of Hawaii. Mean monthly density (? SL) of Akepa was 5.74 t 0.87, 1.3? 0.41, 0.96 -? 0.13, and 0.76 ? 0.12 Akepa/ha at Kau Forest, Hamakua, Keauhou Ranch,...
Chemistry of spring and well waters on Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, and vicinity
Cathy J. Janik, Manuel Nathenson, M. A. Scholl
1994, Open-File Report 94-586
Published and new data for chemical and isotopic samples from wells and springs on Kilauea Volcano and vicinity are presented. These data are used to understand processes that determine the chemistry of dilute meteoric water, mixtures with sea water, and thermal water. Data for well and spring samples of non-thermal...
Fractionation of families of major, minor, and trace metals across the melt-vapor interface in volcanic exhalations
T. K. Hinkley, M.-F. Le Cloarec, G. Lambert
1994, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (58) 3255-3263
Chemical families of metals fractionate systematically as they pass from a silicate melt across the interface with the vapor phase and on into a cooled volcanic plume. We measured three groups of metals in a small suite of samples collected on filters from the plumes of Kilauea (Hawaii, USA), Etna...
Volume of magma accumulation or withdrawal estimated from surface uplift or subsidence, with application to the 1960 collapse of Kilauea volcano
P.T. Delaney, D.F. McTigue
1994, Bulletin of Volcanology (56) 417-424
An elastic point source model proposed by Mogi for magma chamber inflation and deflation has been applied to geodetic data collected at many volcanoes. The volume of ground surface uplift or subsidence estimated from this model is closely related to the volume of magma injection into or withdrawal from the...
Relaxation of the south flank after the 7.2-magnitude Kalapana earthquake, Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
John J. Dvorak, Fred W. Klein, Donald A. Swanson
1994, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (84) 133-141
An M = 7.2 earthquake on 29 November 1975 caused the south flank of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, to move seaward several meters: a catastrophic release of compression of the south flank caused by earlier injections of magma into the adjacent segment of a rift zone. The focal mechanisms of the...
Surface degassing and modifications to vesicle size distributions in active basalt flows
K. V. Cashman, M. T. Mangan, S. Newman
1994, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (61) 45-68
The character of the vesicle population in lava flows includes several measurable parameters that may provide important constraints on lava flow dynamics and rheology. Interpretation of vesicle size distributions (VSDs), however, requires an understanding of vesiculation processes in feeder conduits, and of post-eruption modifications to VSDs during transport and emplacement....
Seismic hazards at Kilauea and Mauna Loa volcanoes, Hawaii
F. W. Klein
1994, Open-File Report 94-216
A significant seismic hazard exists in south Hawaii from large tectonic earthquakes that can reach magnitude 8 and intensity XII. This paper quantifies the hazard by estimating the horizontal peak ground acceleration (PGA) in south Hawaii which occurs with a 90% probability of not being exceeded during exposure times from...
Role of olivine cumulates in destabilizing the flanks of Hawaiian volcanoes
D.A. Clague, R.P. Denlinger
1994, Bulletin of Volcanology (56) 425-434
The south flank of Kilauea Volcano is unstable and has the structure of a huge landslide; it is one of at least 17 enormous catastrophic landslides shed from the Hawaiian Islands. Mechanisms previously proposed for movement of the south flank invoke slip of the volcanic pile over seafloor sediments. Slip...
Petrology of gabbroic xenoliths in 1960 Kilauea basalt: crystalline remnants of prior (1955) magmatism
R.V. Fodor, R. B. Moore
1994, Bulletin of Volcanology (56) 62-74
The 1960 Kapoho lavas of Kilauea's east rift zone contain 1-10 cm xenoliths of olivine gabbro, olivine gabbro-norite, and gabbro norite. Textures are poikilitic (ol+sp+cpx in pl) and intergranular (cpx+pl??ol??opx). Poikilitic xenoliths, which we interpret as cumulates, have the most primitive mineral compositions, Fo82.5, cpx Mg# 86.5, and An80.5. Many...
Development of lava tubes in the light of observations at Mauna Ulu, Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
D. W. Peterson, R. T. Holcomb, R.I. Tilling, R.L. Christiansen
1994, Bulletin of Volcanology (56) 343-360
During the 1969-1974 Mauna Ulu eruption on Kilauea's upper east rift zone, lava tubes were observed to develop by four principal processes: (1) flat, rooted crusts grew across streams within confined channels; (2) overflows and spatter accreted to levees to build arched roofs across streams; (3) plates of solidified crust...
Emplacement and inflation of pahoehoe sheet flows: observations and measurements of active lava flows on Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
K. Hon, J. Kauahikaua, R. Denlinger, K. Mackay
1994, Geological Society of America Bulletin (106) 351-370
Inflated pahoehoe sheet flows have a distinctive horizontal upper surface, which can be several hundred meters across, and are bounded to steep monoclinal uplifts. The inflated sheet flows studied ranged from 1 to 5 m in thickness, but initially propagated as thin sheets of fluid pahoehoe lava, generally 20-30 cm...