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Page 19, results 451 - 475

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Thermal areas on Kilauea and Mauna Loa Volcanoes, Hawaii
Thomas J. Casadevall, Richard W. Hazlett
1983, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (16) 173-188
Active thermal areas are concentrated in three areas on Mauna Loa and three areas on Kilauea. High-temperature fumaroles (115-362°C) on Mauna Loa are restricted to the summit caldera, whereas high-temperature fumaroles on Kilauea are found in the upper East Rift Zone (Mauna Ulu summit fumaroles, 562°C), middle East Rift Zone...
Helium isotopic variations in volcanic rocks from Loihi Seamount and the Island of Hawaii
M.D. Kurz, W.J. Jenkins, S.R. Hart, David Clague
1983, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (66) 388-406
Helium isotopic ratios ranging from 20 to 32 times the atmospheric 3He 4He(RA) have been observed in a suite of 15 basaltic glasses from the Loihi Seamount. These ratios, which are up to four times higher than those of MORB glasses and more than twice those of nearby Kilauea,...
Earthquakes of Loihi submarine volcano and the Hawaiian hot spot
F. W. Klein
1982, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (87) 7719-7726
Loihi is an active submarine volcano located 35 km south of the island of Hawaii and may eventually grow to be the next and southernmost island in the Hawaiian chain. The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory recorded two major earthquake swarms located there in 1971–1972 and 1975 which were probably associated with...
Patterns of historical eruptions at Hawaiian volcanoes
F. W. Klein
1982, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (12) 1-35
Hawaiian eruptions are largely random phenomena displaying no periodicity; that is, future eruptions are relatively independent of the date of the last eruption. Several simultaneous processes probably govern eruption timing so that it appears random. I have performed statistical tests for nonrandomness on the repose times between eruptions and on...
Storage, migration, and eruption of magma at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii, 1971-1972
W. A. Duffield, R.L. Christiansen, R. Y. Koyanagi, D. W. Peterson
1982, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (13) 273-307
The magmatic plumbing system of Kilauea Volcano consists of a broad region of magma generation in the upper mantle, a steeply inclined zone through which magma rises to an intravolcano reservoir located about 2 to 6 km beneath the summit of the volcano, and a network of conduits that carry...
Huge landslide blocks in the growth of piton de la fournaise, La réunion, and Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
Wendell A. Duffield, Laurent Stieltjes, Jacques Varet
1982, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (12) 147-160
Piton de la Fournaise, on the island of La Réunion, and Kilauea volcano, on the island of Hawaii, are active, basaltic shield volcanoes growing on the flanks of much larger shield volcanoes in intraplate tectonic environments. Past studies have shown that the average rate of magma production and the chemistry...
Age and petrology of the Kalaupapa Basalt, Molokai, Hawaii ( geochemistry, Sr isotopes).
D.A. Clague
1982, Pacific Science (36) 411-420
The post-erosional Kalaupapa Basalt on East Molokai, Hawaii, erupted between 0.34 and 0.57 million years ago to form the Kalaupapa Peninsula. The Kalaupapa Basalt ranges in composition from basanite to lava transitional between alkalic and tholeiitic basalt. Rare-earth and other trace-element abundances suggest that the Kalaupapa Basalt could be generated...
Chemistry and isotope ratios of sulfur in basalts and volcanic gases at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
H. Sakai, T. J. Casadevall, J.G. Moore
1982, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (46) 729-738
Eighteen basalts and some volcanic gases from the submarine and subaerial parts of Kilauea volcano were analyzed for the concentration and isotope ratios of sulfur. By means of a newly developed technique, sulfide and sulfate sulfur in the basalts were separately but simultaneously determined. The submarine basalt has 700 ±...
Deep volcanic tremor and magma ascent mechanism under Kilauea, Hawaii
Keiiti Aki, Robert Y Koyanagi
1981, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (86) 7095-7109
Deep harmonic tremor originating at depths around 40 km under Kilauea was studied using records accumulated since 1962 at the Hawaii Volcano Observatory of the U.S. Geological Survey. The deep source of the tremor was determined by onset times and confirmed by the relative amplitude across the island-wide network of...
The glass transition in basalt
M.P. Ryan, C.G. Sammis
1981, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (86) 9519-9535
The glass transition has been experimentally detected in basalt as (1) an increase in the aggregate linear thermal expansion coefficient αL, (2) an abrupt change in the temperature dependence of Young's modulus dE/dT, and (3) a change in stress relaxation behavior that effectively separates the T> TG and T < TG creep regimes. Transition temperatures determined by the...
Multiple asperity model for earthquake prediction
M. Wyss, A. C. Johnston, F. W. Klein
1981, Nature (289) 231-234
Large earthquakes often occur as multiple ruptures reflecting strong variations of stress level along faults. Dense instrument networks with which the volcano Kilauea is monitored provided detailed data on changes of seismic velocity, strain accumulation and earthquake occurrence rate before the 1975 Hawaii 7.2-mag earthquake. During the ???4 yr of...
A catalogue of drill core recovered from Kilauea Iki lava lake, from 1967 to 1979
Rosalind Tuthill Helz, Norman G. Banks, Thomas J. Casadevall, Richard S. Fiske, R. B. Moore
1980, Open-File Report 80-504
The purpose of this report is to serve as a descriptive catalogue for drill core recovered from Kilauea Iki lava lake, from 1967 to 1979. Kilauea Iki lava lake was formed when lavas of the 1959 summit eruption were ponded in Kilauea Iki pit crater, a large pit crater...
Rates of volcanic activity along the southwest rift zone of Mauna Loa volcano, Hawaii
P. W. Lipman
1980, Bulletin Volcanologique (43) 703-725
Flow-by-flow mapping of the 65 km long subaerial part of the southwest rift zone and adjacent flanks of Mauna Loa Volcano, Hawaii, and about 50 new 14C dates on charcoal from beneath these flows permit estimates of rates of lava accumulation and volcanic growth over the past 10 000 years....