Located at the summits of both Kilauea and
Mauna Loa are calderas.
The areas of the calderas are 15 and 11 square kilometers, respectively,
and their depths range from 140 to 170 m. The outlines of the
calderas are distinctly non-circular, strong evidence that they
result from the coalescence of more than one center of collapse.
This is particularly evident in the shape of
Moku'aweoweo, the
caldera of Mauna Loa. Moku'aweoweo is strongly aligned in a direction
that points towards the two Mauna Loa rift zones. The smaller
collapse features that have coalesced to form Moku'aweoweo indicate
the locations of zones of magma storage. This is evidence that
the main magma chamber complex itself is aligned along these directions.
How do calderas actually form on basaltic volcanoes? Basaltic
calderas are often shown as if they formed when a big piston-shaped
cylinder of rock drops into the magma chamber, but this is not
correct. A growing body of evidence is pointing to the idea that
the calderas are sag structures that form when support is removed
from below the summit.
Walker (1988)
showed that the cumulative subsidence of the Kilauea caldera has
been funnel-shaped.
Additionally, a study of the eroded Ko'olau
caldera showed that all the caldera-filling lavas have a centripetal
dip (Walker 1988).
The reason active Hawaiian calderas have steep walls is that surface
rocks are too brittle to sag very well, and they fracture. The
flat floors result from the re-surfacing by flows erupted within
the calderas.
This resurfacing points to the fact that calderas are very
dynamic features that are capable of collapsing and infilling
many times. Indeed, ~25% of the surface of Mauna Loa is covered
with lavas erupted ~600 years ago during a time when the summit
caldera was full and overflowing
(Lockwood & Lipman 1987)(e.g. Macdonald 1965;
Simkin & Fiske 1986;
Decker 1987).
They should not be interpreted as being the result of single catastrophic
events.
This is not to say that distinct collapse events do not occur.
Three large pyroclastic units have been mapped at Kilauea, and
each can be correlated with a caldera collapse event (but not
necessarily a caldera-forming event). The prevailing idea is that
when magma drains suddenly from the summit region, support of
the caldera floor is removed and collapse occurs. Groundwater
is then able to flow inward towards the hot volcanic plumbing,
and it flashes to steam, producing phreatic eruptions
(as in 1924)
or phreatomagmatic eruptions (as in 1790;
e.g. McPhie et al. 1990).
Calderas are thus presumed to be have come and gone during
the tholeiite stages of all the Hawaiian volcanoes, however, direct
evidence is not present at all of them. Mauna Kea and Hualalai,
for example, show no evidence of having had calderas in the past.
As noted above, the "caldera" of Haleakala, although
spectacular, is actually an erosional feature on the East Maui
volcano, and evidence of a true volcanic caldera there has likewise
not been found.
On some of the other older volcanoes the presence of old calderas
manifests itself in sequences of thick flat-lying ponded flows,
and areas of preferential erosion. This is particularly the case
for East Moloka'i volcano. In these
cases the centers
of the volcanoes are now occupied by big holes. Caldera-filling
lavas are usually easier to erode than flank lava flows because
during the active period of the volcano's life the center of the
volcano (the caldera) is the zone of greatest thermal and hydrothermal
alteration and the rocks are quickly reduced to clays. An alternative
idea is that the calderas happened to be in a state of collapse
(rather than infilling) at the end of the tholeiite stage.
The situation seems to have been reversed on the old Kaua'i
volcano. Here the ponded flows were so massive that they present
more resistance to erosion compared to the flank lavas, and the
outline of the old Kaua'i caldera is today marked by a high. relatively
circular plateau. This also assumes that Kaua'i was
only a single
volcano, an idea recently challenged by Robin Holcomb of the USGS.
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