Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Reconnaissance map showing thickness of volcanic ash deposits in the greater Hilo area, Hawaii

January 1, 1983

This study was undertaken to determine the thickness and distribution of volcanic ash deposits in the greater Hilo area, Hawaii, as a step toward evaluating their susceptibility to failure during earthquake shaking. On several occasions their instability has resulted in serious damage. For example, the 1868 earthquake (m=7+), following a prolonged rainy period, caused a debris flow of hillside ash deposits that killed 31 people in Wood Valley (Bringham, 1869). The 1973 Honomu earthquake (m=6.2) resulted in more damage from shaking to areas underlain by ash deposits in the older part of Hilo than in other areas, and soil slips in ash, as well as rockfalls, were common along the roads north of town (Nielsen and others, 1977). 

Three geologic units are represented on the accompanying map: the ash deposits, a clay bed that locally underlies the ash, and the bedrock material. 

Publication Year 1983
Title Reconnaissance map showing thickness of volcanic ash deposits in the greater Hilo area, Hawaii
DOI 10.3133/mf1499
Authors Jane M. Buchanan-Banks
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Miscellaneous Field Studies Map
Series Number 1499
Index ID mf1499
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse