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Hawaii scientific drilling protect: Summary of preliminary results

January 1, 1996

Petrological, geochemical, geomagnetic, and volcanological characterization of the recovered core from a 1056-m-deep well into the flank of the Mauna Kea volcano in Hilo, Hawaii, and downhole logging and fluid sampling have provided a unique view of the evolution and internal structure of a major oceanic volcano unavailable from surface exposures. Core recovery was ~90%, yielding a time series of fresh, subaerial lavas extending back to ~400 ka. Results of this 1993 project provide a basis for a more ambitious project to core drill a well 4.5 km deep in a nearby location with the goal of recovering an extended, high-density stratigraphic sequence of lavas.

Publication Year 1996
Title Hawaii scientific drilling protect: Summary of preliminary results
Authors D. DePaolo, E. Stolper, D. Thomas, F. Albarede, O. Chadwick, D. Clague, M. Feigenson, F. Frey, M. Garcia, A. Hofmann, B. L. Ingram, B. M. Kennedy, J. Kirschvink, M. Kurz, Carlo Laj, J. Lockwood, K. Ludwig, T. McEvilly, R. Moberly, G. Moore, Jeff Moore, R. Morin, F. Paillet, P. Renne, M. Rhodes, M. Tatsumoto, H. Taylor, G. Walker, R. Wilkins
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title GSA Today
Index ID 70018133
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse