Hawai‘i’s Vanishing Lake
By
J.M. Buck
Perched
below the summit of Mauna Kea at 13,020 feet amidst an arid, rocky,
oxygen-poor landscape lies one of Hawaii’s more unusual natural
wonders: Lake Waiʻau. But if you want to see the only glacially
formed lake in the mid-Pacific, you’d better do it soon. The lake,
whose surface area normally fluctuates between 1.2–1.7 acres, has
been disappearing at an alarmingly rapid rate since 2010. As of
September 2013, the seventh highest lake in the US had shrunk to 115
square meters (0.03 acres), two-percent of its normal size. What was
once a small, gem-like, green lake with an average depth of 10 feet
is today little more than a large, 1-foot-deep puddle.
The
Office of Mauna Kea Management (OMKM) has been working in conjunction
with the Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR) Division of
Forestry and Wildlife (DOFAW), the state entity that oversees the
management of the Mauna Kea Ice Age Natural Area Reserve, and Hawaii
Volcanoes Observatory (HVO) to attempt to solve the mystery of the
vanishing lake. The lake’s decreasing size has been monitored since
2010 through satellite imagery and repetitive aerial photography. The
results are startling; a dramatic decrease in the lake’s level
between October 2012 and September 2013 is starkly evident.
Historically,
the rise and fall of water levels at Lake Waiʻau, which is situated
within the core of the Pu’u Waiʻau cinder cone, have been
correlated with precipitation levels. According to a report released
by HVO on November 2, 2013, a several month period of intense drought
that began in early 2010 followed by consecutive years of below
average rainfall may be the culprit for the dramatic decrease in Lake
Waiʻau’s level. As of December 31, 2013, Hawaii Drought Monitor
data still listed the Mauna Kea region as “abnormally dry,” the
lowest drought rating on a 5-tier scale. Another hypothesis proposes
that the lake could be shrinking because it is a “perched” body
of water; water gathers in a depression and is held by an impermeable
substrate whose stratigraphy is composed of layers of silt clay and
ash. According to the HVO report, there are proposals that permafrost
underlies and surrounds the lakebed, and retreating permafrost
resultant of climate change could be a factor. According to a June
19, 2003 article released in HVO’s online publication, Volcano
Watch, Alfred Woodcock, who discovered a limited area of permafrost
approximately 10 meters below ground level at nearby Pu’u Wekiu,
put the permafrost proposal forth. No permafrost has ever been
confirmed to exist at Pu’u Waiʻau, and, according to the report,
“It seems unlikely that permafrost could survive beneath a Mauna
Kea lake, because the average air temperature is too warm much of the
year, and the lake would melt the underlying ice.” The bottom line
is that researchers don’t yet know what is causing Lake Waiʻau’s
rapid disappearance. Native Hawaiians, however, have their own
philosophy regarding the lake’s decline.
Lake
Waiʻau has been the site of sacred Hawaiian cultural practices since
the sun went critical. Due to the lake’s high elevation, the waters
of Lake Waiʻau are considered by Hawaiians to be the most sacred in
the Hawaiian Islands. According to a resolution drafted by the Waimea
Civic Club, Waiʻau’s water was and is used for healing and
cultural practices, and families with genealogical connections to
Mauna Kea use the lake itself as a repository for their children’s
piko (umbilical cords). Kumu Larry Kimura, Assistant Professor of
Hawaiian Language and Hawaiian Studies at UH Hilo, is a member of one
of those families. “Lake Waiʻau is and has always been a prominent
geographic feature on the summit area of Maunakea ([n]ote… the
spelling of Maunakea) so from olden times, before there were any
modern roads, trails went to and by Waiʻau,” wrote Kimura in an
email correspondence. “Hawaiian families throughout the islands
would be careful to keep that small bit of their babies umbilical
cord once it dropped off the belly to deposit in each family’s own
traditional places. For my family, Lake Waiʻau is our repository.
‘Piko’ is the word for the umbilicus, and it can also refer to
the crown or summit area such as Maunakea. The ‘piko’ connects us
to the source of our beginnings and as Hawaiians we respect and honor
our genealogical connections in this small way of caring for that
little piece of our infants’ piko.”
The
tiny lake, guarded by Mo‘oinanea, the water spirit of Lake Waiʻau,
is viewed by Native Hawaiians as a cosmological epicenter, with Mauna
Kea as a whole representing the fount of all life in Hawaii,
including humans and the islands themselves. The University of
Hawai‘i’s 2009 Mauna Kea Comprehensive Management Plan quotes
noted Hawaiian historian and researcher Kepa Maly: “The mountain is
a respected elder, a spiritual connection to one’s gods.” The
same paragraph makes clear the cultural importance of Mauna Kea
through the words of Hawaiian cultural practitioner Pualani
Kanaka‘ole Kanahele: “Mauna Kea is the first-born to us. That’s
where our roots start; that’s where our island begins; that’s
where the first rain from Wākea hits. It is our mountain. That’s
where the first sunlight that rises every morning hits. That mountain
is first for everything we have … And so, because Mauna Kea is the
first-born, we need to mālama (care for) Mauna Kea.” In other
words, Mauna Kea is the embodiment of Hawaii and the Hawaiian people;
Lake Waiʻau is the life-giving wellspring emanating from Mauna Kea,
thus the life-source of the Hawaiian people. The mountain itself,
touching the heavens, is revered as a sacred altar through which
contact is made with the gods. Mauna Kea embodies the union of Wākea,
the Sky Father, and Papahānaumoku (often referred to as Papa), the
mother goddess who gave birth to the Islands. And like our children
and elders, Mauna Kea must be cared for in appropriate fashion. Many
Hawaiians attribute the lake’s recession to a perceived disrespect
of the summit, of the temple of Mauna Kea. “In my lifetime, I have
never seen Waiʻau so dry,” wrote Kimura. “To me it sends a
message to the world of being wary of putting our conveniences ahead
of the sources of our creation.”
Could
it be that Mo‘oinanea is saddened by all of the construction on the
summit and the unintentional desecration of her watery home? Has she
just given up and left Lake Waiʻau? What will it mean for Hawaiians
if Lake Waiʻau vanishes completely? Kimura says that though the lake
is very low, it cannot vanish. “Waiʻau can never disappear
completely because its placement is beyond the physical, he wrote.
“It is spiritually and culturally permanent. It will continue to be
my family’s place to maintain our connections to the sources of our
creation.”
The
birthplace of Hawaii and its people are in trouble. Despite the
undoubtedly good intentions of those who “manage” Mauna Kea, many
Native Hawaiians cultural practitioners feel that their place of
worship, their source of life – their first-born – should be left
alone. Mauna Kea is not just a mountain; Lake Waiʻau is not just
some water that makes for a good tourist attraction. As stated
eloquently in the Mauna Kea Comprehensive Management Plan: “…Mauna
Kea is sacred. Mauna Kea is where heaven, earth and stars find union.
Not just any heaven, but Wākea, not just any earth, but
Papahānaumoku, and not just any constellation of twinkling lights,
but Ho‘ohōkūkalani, whose children descend and return to the
stars.”
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