Geological Guide to the Island of Hawaii


Book Description

Geological guide to the Big Island of Hawaii designed for tourists and nature lovers. This book explains, mile by mile, the geology along all of the island's major roads. Several dozen maps and diagrams are included. Format: 6x9 inches. This version does NOT contain any photos. For the same text with BLACK and WHITE photos see: Island of Hawaii Geological Guide. For COLOR photos see: Illustrated Geological Guide to the Island of Hawaii.




Island of Hawaii Geological Guide


Book Description

This book, designed for tourists, gives a mile by mile description of the geology along all of the roads on the Island of Hawaii (the Big Island). This guide is illustrated with maps, diagrams, and hundreds of BLACK AND WHITE photos. The color version of this book is Illustrated Geological Guide to the Island of Hawaii.










Illustrated Geological Guide to the Island of Hawaii


Book Description

This book gives tourists mile by mile descriptions of the geology on all of the roads on the Island of Hawai (the Big Island). Many geologic maps, diagrams, and 420 COLOR photographs illustrate this geology. For a less expensive book with BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOS see Island of Hawaii Geological Guide by R. Robinson. For a 6x9 version with NO PHOTOS see Geological Guide to the Island of Hawaii.







Geology of the Hawaiian Islands


Book Description

The paper is a synopsis of the geology of the Hawaiian Islands. It covers the Island of Hawaii (Mauna Kea, Mauna Loa, Hualalai, Kohala, Kilauea), Island of Maui (Haleakala), Island of Kahoolawe, Island of Lanai, Island of Molokai (Kalaupapa), Island of Oahu (Waianae Range, Koolau Range), Island of Kauai, Island of Niihau, Offshore islets, Leeward islands.




Exploring Geology on the Island of Oahu, A Field Guide to Important Geological Locations


Book Description

This field guide to important geological locations describes the geology and volcanic significant at 39 stops on Oahu. It included a short introduction on how Hawaiian hotspot shield volcanoes formed and emerged from the sea floor. This is followed by the most current understanding of how the island of Oahu formed during the past 5 million years. This guidebook is a travel companion for residents and visitors alike that can easily be carried while you drive and hike to the many locations to see first-hand some of the mysteries geologists have uncovered as you explore our magical island. You will explore the geology of Oahu visiting numerous world-class locations and see many volcanic landforms present at our most informative geological locations. Following the overview of the geology and descriptions of the volcanic rock types found on Oahu we provide a brief overview of the typical life and demise of a Hawaiian hotspot volcano (Chapter 3) and an overview of Oahu's three main shield volcanoes (Chapter 4). Chapters 5 through 8 include the 39 stops depicted by detailed satellite images, topographic maps, high-quality photographs, plots, and illustrative figures that describe what you are looking at as you drive, hike, boat, canoe, walk to these readily accessible locations at your leisure.




Roadside Geology of Hawaiʻi


Book Description

A comprehensive look at the entire range of new technologies related to broadband communications--from the physical transmission medium to highspeed data and video services. Offers information on current trends and emerging technologies, including broadband subscriber networks, synchronous optical transmission and networked survivability, TCP/IP protocol suites and the Internet, wireless and IEEE highspeed LANs, data services and ATM networks, MPEG2, highspeed and realtime protocols, and information superhighways and infrastructures. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.




Geological Field Guide to the Hawaiian Islands


Book Description

Published by the American Geophysical Union as part of the Field Trip Guidebooks Series, Volume 188/304. The Hawaiian Islands form the youngest part of a chain of volcanoes that stretches nearly 6000 km across the north Pacific Ocean (Fig. 1). This unique geological feature consists of at least 107 individual volcanoes having a combined volume greater than 1 million km3 (Bargar and Jackson, 1974). The chain is age progressive with still-active volcanoes at the southeast end whereas those at the northwest end have ages of about 75–80 Ma. The volcanoes of the chain were erupted onto the seafloor without regard for the age or structure of the underlying ocean crust. The Hawaiian volcanic ridge is surrounded by a symmetrical depression, the Hawaiian Deep, as much as 0.7 km deeper than the adjacent seafloor. The Hawaiian Deep is in turn surrounded by the broad Hawaiian Arch. Clague and Dalrymple (1987) review the setting and age relations of the volcanoes that comprise the chain.