February 7, 1997
A weekly feature provided by scientists at the Hawaiian Volcano
Observatory.
Forgotten Faults
Most visitors to Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park have
driven down the Chain of Craters Road to the coast and observed
the high south-facing pali that form the Hilina fault system
of Kilauea Volcano. These active faults border huge blocks of
the volcano that occasionally move downward and seaward in jumps
of a meter (3 ft) or more at a time, accompanied by large earthquakes.
In west Hawai`i, the pali on the north side of Kealakekua Bay is
a good example of an active fault that strikingly resembles those
in the Hilina system.
A lesser known and under-appreciated set of active faults and gaping
ground cracks is the Koa`e fault system on Kilauea. From the Chain of
Craters Road to the hair-pin bend near Kipuka Nene, the Hilina Pali
Road winds its way around fault-formed pali and across open cracks.
The zone of faults is more than 3 km (2 miles) wide and 15 km (9 miles)
long, reaching from near Mauna Ulu to the southwest rift zone at the
Kamakai`a Hills. Most of the pali face north, toward the summit of the
volcano; the most prominent is 15 m high (50 ft high) Kulanaokuaiki
Pali, which forms the southern boundary of the Koa`e fault system. The
faults continue into the east and southwest rift zones, where they
merge with eruptive fissures.
Faults in the Koa`e are active. Parts of the fault system have
cracked and been tossed up and down during big swarms of earthquakes
several times during this century. The largest historical episode
of cracking took place on Christmas Eve and Day 1965, when the
Hilina Pali Road at its crossing of Kulanaokuaiki Pali was broken
vertically more than 2.4 m (8 ft); the pali itself jumped up about
75 cm (2.5 ft), and the flat ground north of it sank about 1.8
m (6 ft). As USGS observers Dick Fiske and Bob Koyanagi wrote,
"At 0840 [Christmas Day] the area was wrenched by an earthquake
so violent that it nearly toppled a vehicle parked nearby, and
the crack [at the foot of the pali] abruptly opened to about 1.5
m (5 feet)." Cracks and faults continued to move for another
two days.
Occasionally eruptions take place from vents near both ends of
the Koa`e fault system. The most recent was in 1973 next to the
east rift zone. For the most part, however, the Koa`e serves as
a non-eruptive "bridge" connecting the two rift zones.
The rarity of eruptions is probably why this remarkable fault
zone, a key to understanding the growth of Kilauea, is so forgotten.
Why go there when you can see liquid lava elsewhere?
From geologic studies we know that the Koa`e fault system has
been active for at least the past 1,100 years and probably much longer.
Numerous cracks totaling 18~34 m (60~110 ft) in width cut 400-year-old
lava flows in the Koa`e south of Kilauea's caldera. Other measurements
suggest that similar cracking probably also took place repeatedly
between 1,100 and 400 years ago. Strangely, the far western part of the
fault system has not moved recently; here, unbroken beds of ash erupted
in 1790 cover older cracks.
The origin of the Koa`e fault system is controversial, but many
geologists believe it to be related to the splitting of Kilauea
along the east and southwest rift zones as the volcano is driven
apart by a combination of gravitational collapse and magma wedging
into the rift zones. That process is episodic, not continuous.
At present, the Koa`e is simply sitting on the southern part of
the volcano, which is rafting seaward. But eventually the rocks
will break, the faults will move, and a new round of repairs will
be due on the Hilina Pali Road.
        

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