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August 22, 1997
A weekly feature provided by scientists at the Hawaiian Volcano
Observatory.
Radial vents: Mauna Loa's curve ball for lava flow hazards
Rift zones, which form during the shield-building stage of
development, are prominent features of Hawaiian volcanoes. They are
typically long, linear features whose formation and orientation are
influenced by gravity and the pressures imparted by adjacent
volcanoes. Most Hawaiian volcanoes have at least two major rift
zones. These rift zones extend all the way down to the ocean floor.
The rift zones are the loci of many eruptions from vents called
spatter cones, spatter ramparts, ground cracks, pit craters and cinder
cones. They are regions of structural weakness on the flanks of
volcanoes where magma tends to rise to the surface from depth along
extensive cracks and fissures. When the lava reaches the surface, an
eruption occurs. The rift zones and summit have been the source of the
vast majority of Mauna Loa's eruptions.
In addition to rift zones, Mauna Loa has radial vents. Radial
vents are eruptive fissures on the southwest, west and north flanks
that are oriented radially to Mauna Loa's summit and are located
outside the defined rift and summit regions. Because Mauna Loa is such
a large volcano, pressures exerted by the adjacent volcanoes do not
affect the free-moving flank (south Kona flank), nor do they affect the
flanks (north and west flanks) at the higher elevations. Thus, radial
vents can form in these geographic regions, away from the rift zones.
Through our mapping efforts to recreate the eruptive history of
Mauna Loa, we have, thus far, identified 33 radial vents.
Approximately two-thirds (19) of these vents are found on Mauna Loa's
west flank, one-quarter (8) within the north flank, and one-fifth (6)
on the southwestern half of the volcano.
During the historical period (since 1843), 33 eruptions have
occurred on Mauna Loa. Two of those have been radial vent eruptions.
Radial vents have erupted from the 11,000 foot elevation to below sea
level. The 1859 eruption of Mauna Loa occurred high on the northwest
flank of the volcano from radial vents originating at 11,000 feet, with
successive fissures extending down to 8,600 feet. This eruption lasted
for approximately 300 days and produced a 50-km- (30-mile-) long lava
flow that entered the sea on the north side of Kiholo Bay.
The second historical radial vent eruption was a submarine eruption
at Kealakekua Bay, near Ke`ei. On February 14, 1877, a summit
eruption began at Mokuaweoweo. After several days, the activity
subsided. On February 24, 1877, passengers traveling on the
interisland steamerKilauea saw "natives" paddle their canoes
over boiling water. Blocks of incandescent lava rose to the surface,
emitting steam and stinking of sulfur; as these rocks cooled, they once
again returned to the deep.
The presence of radial vents on the flanks of Mauna Loa reveals a
very different scenario of lava flow hazards from that created by rift
zones themselves. The response time associated with eruptive events
that occur in the rift zones and summit regions of volcanoes ranges
from several hours to several days. However, the presence of radial
vents scattered across the flanks of the volcano poses a more serious
potential risk to persons and property on the north, west and southwest
flanks of Mauna Loa. The next eruption on Mauna Loa could be at the
summit, along the rift, or nearly anywhere else on the volcano's
flanks.
Kilauea Eruption Status--August 15, 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, generally with about a 30-minute beat but ranging from half
that to a couple of hours. Sporadic fountaining was observed from the
cone within the crater. Glow was intense during the clear nights early
and late in the week. During the night of August 17-18 the pond spilled
out the east end of the crater, and a surface flow moved a short
distance northeastward beyond the crater. Lava continued to flow
through tubes from the south shield to the coast and into the sea. The
public is reminded that the ocean entry areas are extremely hazardous,
with explosions accompanying frequent collapses of the lava delta. The
steam cloud is highly acidic and laced with glass particles.
Recent Big Island Earthquakes
There were no felt earthquakes reported during the week.
        

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