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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rebecca Carey , Valérie Cayol , Michael Poland , Dominique WeisPublisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc Imprint: American Geophysical Union Dimensions: Width: 22.10cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 28.60cm Weight: 1.470kg ISBN: 9781118872048ISBN 10: 1118872045 Pages: 600 Publication Date: 07 April 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsContributors vii Preface xi About the Companion Website xiii 1. How and Why Hawaiian Volcanism Has Become Pivotal to Our Understanding of Volcanoes from Their Source to the Surface 1 Michael O. Garcia 2. Seismic Constraints on a Double‐Layered Asymmetric Whole‐Mantle Plume Beneath Hawai‘I 19 Cheng Cheng, Richard M. Allen, Rob W. Porritt, and Maxim D. Ballmer 3. Asymmetric Dynamical Behavior of Thermochemical Plumes and Implications for Hawaiian Lava Composition 35 Maxim D. Ballmer, Garrett Ito, and Cheng Cheng 4. Major‐Element and Isotopic Variations in Mauna Loa Magmas over 600 ka: Implications for Magma Generation and Source Lithology as Mauna Loa Transits the Hawaiian Plume 59 J. Michael Rhodes 5. Lithium Isotopic Signature of Hawaiian Basalts 79 Lauren Harrison, Dominique Weis, Diane Hanano, and Elspeth Barnes 6. Onset of Rejuvenated‐Stage Volcanism and the Formation of Lı ̄hu‘e Basin: Kaua‘i Events That Occurred 3–4 Million Years Ago 105 David R. Sherrod, Scot K. Izuka, and Brian L. Cousens 7. Evidence for Large Compositional Ranges in Coeval Melts Erupted from Kı ̄lauea’s Summit Reservoir 125 Rosalind T. Helz, David A. Clague, Larry G. Mastin, and Timothy R. Rose 8. Petrologic Testament to Changes in Shallow Magma Storage and Transport During 30+ Years of Recharge and Eruption at Kı ̄lauea Volcano, Hawai‘I 147 Carl R. Thornber, Tim R. Orr, Christina Heliker, and Richard P. Hoblitt 9. Shallow Magma Storage at Piton de la Fournaise Volcano After 2007 Summit Caldera Collapse Tracked in Pele’s Hairs 189 Andrea Di Muro, Thomas Staudacher, Valerie Ferrazzini, Nicole Metrich, Pascale Besson, Christine Garofalo, and Benoit Villemant 10. Analysis of Seismicity Rate Changes and Tilt During Early Episodic Fountaining Stage of Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō, Hawai‘i, Eruption: Implications for Magma Storage and Transport 213 Harmony V. Colella and James H. Dieterich 11. Episodic Deflation–Inflation Events at Kïlauea Volcano and Implications for the Shallow Magma System 229 Kyle R. Anderson, Michael P. Poland, Jessica H. Johnson, and Asta Miklius 12. Crustal Stress and Structure at Kı ̄lauea Volcano Inferred from Seismic Anisotropy 251 Jessica H. Johnson, Donald A. Swanson, Diana C. Roman, Michael P. Poland, and Weston A. Thelen 13. Delicate Balance of Magmatic‐Tectonic Interaction at Kı ̄lauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, Revealed from Slow Slip Events 269 Emily K. Montgomery‐Brown, Michael P. Poland, and Asta Miklius 14. From Reservoirs and Conduits to the Surface: Review of Role of Bubbles in Driving Basaltic Eruptions 289 Sylvie Vergniolle and Yves Gaudemer 15. Insights Into Mixing, Fractionation, and Degassing of Primitive Melts at Kı ̄lauea Volcano, Hawai‘I 323 Marie Edmonds, Isobel Sides, and John Maclennan 16. Reticulite‐Producing Fountains From Ring Fractures in Kı ̄lauea Caldera ca. 1500 CE 351 Michael May, Rebecca J. Carey, Donald A. Swanson, and Bruce F. Houghton 17. Hawaiian Fissure Fountains: Quantifying Vent and Shallow Conduit Geometry, Episode 1 of the 1969–1974 Mauna Ulu Eruption 369 Carolyn Parcheta, Sarah Fagents, Donald A. Swanson, Bruce F. Houghton, and Todd Ericksen 18. Kı ̄lauea’s 5–9 March 2011 Kamoamoa Fissure Eruption and Its Relation to 30+ Years of Activity From Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō 393 Tim R. Orr, Michael P. Poland, Matthew R. Patrick, Weston A. Thelen, A. Jeff Sutton, Tamar Elias, Carl R. Thornber, Carolyn Parcheta, and Kelly M. Wooten 19. Onset of a Basaltic Explosive Eruption From Kïlauea’s Summit in 2008 421 Rebecca J. Carey, Lauren Swavely, Donald A. Swanson, Bruce F. Houghton, Tim R. Orr, Tamar Elias, and A. Jeff Sutton 20. Primitive Components, Crustal Assimilation, and Magmatic Degassing During the Early 2008 Kïlauea Summit Eruptive Activity 439 Michael C. Rowe, Carl R. Thornber, and Tim R. Orr 21. FLOWGO 2012: An Updated Framework for Thermorheological Simulations of Channel‐Contained Lava 457 Andrew J. L. Harris and Scott K. Rowland 22. Lava Flows in 3D: Using Airborne Lidar and Preeruptive Topography To Evaluate Lava Flow Surface Morphology and Thickness in Hawai‘I 483 Hannah R. Dietterich, S. Adam Soule, Katharine V. Cashman, and Benjamin H. Mackey 23. Are Piton de la Fournaise (La Réunion) and Kı ̄lauea (Hawai‘i) Really “Analog Volcanoes”? 507 Aline Peltier, Michael P. Poland, and Thomas Staudacher 24. “Points Requiring Elucidation” About Hawaiian Volcanism 533 Michael P. Poland Index 563ReviewsAuthor InformationRebecca Carey is a postdoctoral researcher in School of Earth Sciences at the University of Tasmania. Rebecca's research interests revolve around the physical aspects of volcanology: processes of magma ascent and degassing, fieldwork deposit mapping, synchrotron microanalytical techniques - both FTIR and Micro X-ray tomography. Michael Poland isa research geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey in the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.He has about ten peer-reviewed publications including in the Nature Geoscience and Geophysical Research Letters. He conducts research in deformation monitoring of Hawaiian volcanoes and in active volcanism. Valerie Cayol is a research associate in The National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) at the Univeristy of Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, France. He has five major peer-reviewed publications in the Journal of Geophysical Research. His research focuses on numerical modeling of stresses and deformations, inversion of surface deformation data, development of methods allowing the simultaneous inversion of geometries and stress distributions on fractures or in the volume, joint inversion of deformation data and seismicity, study of magma transfer and storage within volcanic edifices, study of the interaction between magma transfers and the tectonics. Professor Dominique Weis is a full professor and Canadian Research Chair in the department of Earth and Ocean Sciences at the University of British Columbia. She is the Director of the Pacific Centre for Isotopic and Geochemical Research (PCIGR) at University of British Columbia. He has been a fellow of AGU (2010) and Geochemical Society/European Association of Geochemistry (2011). He has over 165 peer-reviewed publications in reputed journals including Nature Geoscience and Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. His research interests include isotope geology, petrology, volcanology, geochronology and environmental sciences with special focus on defining the source and evolution of igneous and metamorphic rocks, the interactions between different reservoirs (mantle, crust and atmosphere) and the role of tectonic settings, geochemical and isotopic studies of sedimentary rocks, global changes and reconstitution of past environments, distribution of pollutants in natural and anthropogenic systems and application of non-traditional heavy stable to environmental issues and analytical technique developments. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |