Imaging the crustal magma sources beneath Mauna Loa and Kilauea volcanoes, Hawaii
Imaging the crustal magma sources beneath Mauna Loa and Kilauea volcanoes, Hawaii
Geology (Boulder) (October 1997) 25 (10): 867-870
- arrival time
- body waves
- crust
- data processing
- earthquakes
- East Pacific Ocean Islands
- elastic waves
- eruptions
- faults
- finite difference analysis
- Hawaii
- Hawaii County Hawaii
- Hawaii Island
- imagery
- iterative methods
- Kilauea
- magma chambers
- magmas
- Mauna Loa
- Oceania
- oceanic crust
- P-waves
- Polynesia
- seismic waves
- seismology
- shield volcanoes
- statistical analysis
- three-dimensional models
- tomography
- traveltime
- United States
- upper crust
- velocity structure
- volcanoes
- volcanology
- Hilina Fault
Three-dimensional seismic P-wave traveltime tomography is used to image the magma sources beneath Mauna Loa and Kilauea volcanoes, Hawaii. High-velocity bodies (>6.4 km/s) in the upper 9 km of the crust beneath the summits and rift zones of the volcanoes correlate with zones of high magnetic intensities and are interpreted as solidified gabbro-ultramafic cumulates from which the surface volcanism is derived. The proximity of these high-velocity features to the rift zones is consistent with a ridge-spreading model of the volcanic flank. Southeast of the Hilina fault zone, along the south flank of Kilauea, low-velocity material (<6.0 km/s) is observed extending to depths of 9-11 km, indicating that the Hilina fault may extend possibly as deep as the basal decollement. Along the southeast flank of Mauna Loa, a similar low-velocity zone associated with the Kaoiki fault zone is observed extending to depths of 6-8 km. These two upper crustal low-velocity zones suggest common stages in the evolution of the Hawaiian shield volcanoes in which these fault systems are formed as a result of upper crustal deformation in response to magma injection within the volcanic edifice.