August 1,1997
A weekly feature provided by scientists at the Hawaiian Volcano
Observatory.
The first written account of Kilauea
The English missionary, Rev. William Ellis, visited the summit
region of Kilauea 174 years ago this week and made the first written
description of eruptive activity at the volcano. His foot party
departed Kailua on July 18, 1823, eventually reaching Kapapala on July
30. The next day the hikers passed Ponahohoa (also spelled Ponohohoa
and Ponahoahoa), where they marveled at still-hot fissures, "chasms,"
freshly solidified lava, and sulfurous fume ("smoke") related to a
large eruption more than a month earlier. The site of Ponahohoa is lost
today; the location shown on modern maps is a relatively featureless
area inconsistent with Ellis' description. The fissures described by
Ellis are probably somewhere along the upper reaches of the Great
Crack, now recognized as the source of the 1823 flow.
The explorers spent the night in the lava tube of Keapuana and
observed the glow at Kilauea's summit. The next morning (August 1)
they walked across a "waste of dry sand" that we now know is a deposit
of the explosive eruption of 1790. Passing west of the Kamakaia Hills,
Ellis noted more "chasms" and speculated (correctly, we think) that
they "are connected with Ponahohoa, and may mark the course of a vast
subterraneous channel leading from the volcano to the shore." This
structure is what we now call Kilauea's southwest rift zone.
The trade winds blew fume across the hikers as they labored toward
the caldera. At about 2 p.m. they found themselves atop a steep
precipice 60-120 m (200-400 ft) above a vast plain whose surface was
dotted with large stones (from the 1790 explosion) and was indented by
a great crater about 2.5 km (1.5 mi) away. By walking northward, the
group was able to descend the precipice to the plain and approach the
crater. Ellis' description of this route is inconsistent with today's
topography and indicates that the terrain was modified by filling of
the caldera later in the 19th century.
From the rim of the great crater, Ellis noted an "immense gulf, in
the form of a crescent, about two miles [3 km] in length, from
north-east to south-west, nearly a mile [1.5 km] in width, and
apparently 800 feet [240 m] deep." The "gulf" contained several active
lava lakes and 51 conical islands. Some 120 m (400 ft) below the rim
was a "black ledge," which Ellis correctly interpreted as a bathtub
ring left after withdrawal of lava in the crater. Ellis reasonably
surmised that "this evacuation had caused the inundation of the
Kapapala coast" (the eruption from Ponahohoa).
The party camped that night on the northeast rim of the caldera near
Sulphur Banks. Several men had narrow escapes after falling into cracks
covered by sandy ejecta from the 1790 explosions (the"decomposing lava"
of Ellis). This area is still hazardous, though less so than in 1823
because much of the sand has washed into the cracks. Pools of fresh
water near Sulphur Banks, used by Ellis to fill canteens, may have
occupied small hollows lined by silt and clay from the explosions. The
pools no longer exist.
The next morning (August 2) most of the group traveled to the south
coast via the east side of the caldera. Along the way Ellis climbed
down to the black ledge, described lava tubes and cones, and made a
famous sketch of the south end of the crater. Still farther Ellis
passed Kilauea Iki and noted a fresh lava flow on its floor. At 11
a.m. the party left the summit area and headed southeast, ending at
Kealakomo on the coast that night. The pace of the hikers was
remarkable!
Ellis' clear narrative is the starting point for all subsequent
descriptions of Kilauea's summit area. His estimates of the depth of
the caldera, though greater than most later ones, are reasonable, since
more detailed observations indicate that the caldera was progressively
filling during the rest of the century.
Kilauea Eruption Status--August 1, 1997
Kilauea's east rift zone eruptive activity continued during the past
week with cyclic filling and lowering of the lava pond within Pu`u `O`o
crater. During the morning of July 29, lava flowed over the east and
west rims of the Pu`u `O`o crater and down the sides of the cone for
several hours before the pond level subsided. A blockage in the tube
system caused the supply of lava to the flow entering the ocean to
diminish. Lava stopped entering the ocean shortly after noon on
Tuesday, July 29. A new a'a flow from a breakout above the tube
blockage is located several hundred meters west of the old flow, and
the terminus of the new flow is 400 meters from the ocean. It is
expected to enter the ocean this weekend. The public is reminded that
the ocean entry area is extremely hazardous with frequent collapses of
the lava delta accompanied by explosions.
Recent Big Island Earthquakes
There were no earthquakes reported felt during
the past week.
        

The URL of this page is
http://hvo.wr.usgs.gov/
Contact:
webmaster@hvo.wr.usgs.gov
Updated :
|