Researcher says the Hawaiian Islands are dissolving
22
December, 2012
Reporting
in the journal Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, researchers at
Brigham Young University say that the Hawaiian Islands are slowly
dissolving. Eventually, Oahu’s Koolau and Waianae mountains will
dwindle to little more than a flat, low-lying island like Midway.
While erosion is certainly a guilty party, researchers contend that
the mountains of Oahu are, in fact, dissolving from within.
Researchers
spent several months collecting samples of groundwater and stream
water to determine which source removed more mineral material. They
also put to use surface water estimates from the U.S. Geological
Survey to calculate the quantity of mass that vanished from the
island each year.
Researchers
point out that Oahu is actually rising in elevation at a slow but
steady rate due to plate tectonics.
“The
Big Island is so large that it actually depresses the ocean
crust–kind of like a dimple on a golf ball,” BYU geologist Steve
Nelson told The Science Recorder via email. “Oahu is close enough
to the Big Island such that as the plate drifts to the northwest,
Oahu is moving up and out of the side of the dimple. Kauai is far
enough away (and older) that it has moved out of the dimple. The
estimate of the duration of rising is based on the time it will take
for Oahu to drift to where Kauai is now.”
Mr.
Nelson and colleagues believe that Oahu will continue to grow for as
long as 1.5 million years. Beyond that, the force of groundwater will
eventually win and Oahu will begin its transformation to a flat,
low-lying island like Midway. Researchers are confident that it will
be a very long time before Oahu begins its descent.
“I
don’t think that groundwater will win out faster,” Mr. Nelson
said. “The wet parts of the island are getting flushed pretty
rapidly as it is. It’s good to remember that an atoll like Midway
has had 20+ million years to erode to sea level. Oahu is about 1/10th
that age.”
Although
the researchers focused on Oahu’s Koolau and Waianae mountains, Mr.
Nelson believes that what is happening on Oahu is also happening on
the other islands.
“You
can already see it on the Big Island’s northwest end–the Kohala
Volcano,” said Mr. Nelson. “It has thick soils and deeply carved
valleys like Oahu. Kohala is extinct, so it is no longer reforming
its surface via eruptions. Processes like we have observed are
occurring on most volcanic ocean islands like Samoa, Tahiti, Reunion,
etc.”
Mr.
Nelson believes that his research will help scientists determine how
different materials on the Hawaiian Islands will behave during
earthquakes.
“This
work has direct applications to earthquake hazards–because it
allows you to characterize the stiffness of the weathered material
and thereby how it will respond to earthquakes,” the geologist
said, adding that, “the Big Island has a significant earthquake
hazard.”
While
learning more about earthquake hazards on the Hawaiian Islands is an
important mission, Mr. Nelson admitted that his motivation lies
elsewhere.
“My
motivation [...] is that you can also get at weathering rates by
another means,” he said. “If you know the age of the bedrock and
the thickness of the weathered horizon above it, the downward rate of
advance of the weathering front is simply the thickness of the
weathered horizon divided by the age of the bedrock.”
Mr.
Nelson is currently working with a geophysicist colleague at BYU,
John McBride. They are using high resolution seismic methods to
determine the thickness of weathering horizons. They are conducting
research on Oahu and may work on Kohala in the future.
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