Record Details

Lō'ihi Seamount

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Field Value
Title Lō'ihi Seamount
Names Staudigel, Hubert (creator)
Moyer, Craig L. (creator)
Garcia, Michael O. (creator)
Malahoff, Alex (creator)
Clague, David A. (creator)
Koppers, Anthony A. P. (creator)
Date Issued 2010-03 (iso8601)
Abstract Lō`ihi Seamount defines the volcanically
active, leading edge in the Hawaiian
hotspot chain. It is located on the submarine
flank of Mauna Loa, 30 km south
of the island of Hawai`i. Lō`ihi’s summit
is at 975-m water depth (Pisces Peak),
and the seamount has a pronounced
southern rift that extends down to
about 5000-m water depth (Figure 1).
The summit displays three pit craters
(Figure 1), including Pele’s Pit (1350-m
water depth), the most hydrothermally
active crater, which was formed during
an earthquake swarm in 1996 (Garcia
et al., 2006). Lō`ihi was not recognized
as an active volcano until a sampling
expedition in 1978 that led to a detailed
understanding of Lō`ihi as a juvenile
oceanic intraplate volcano; it then
became the de facto type location for the
first stage in the development of a typical
oceanic intraplate volcano (Figure 2;
Moore et al., 1982; Staudigel et al., 1984;
Koppers and Watts, 2010). Key characteristics
of this “Lō`ihi Stage” of ocean
island formation include: (1) a very small
volume relative to the final completed
volcano, (2) a diverse suite of rock types
ranging from very alkalic to tholeiitic,
and (3) heterogeneous mantle sources.
Since then, Lō`ihi has been the focus
of substantial scientific research, with
numerous sampling expeditions,
leading to a detailed understanding of
its volcanic history, seismic activity,
petrology, geochemistry, and microbiology
(see review by Garcia et al., 2006;
Emerson et al., 2007; http://en.wikipedia.
org/wiki/Loihi_Seamount).
Genre Article
Identifier H. Staudigel, C.L. Moyer, M.O. Garcia, A. Malahoff, D.A. Clague, A.A.P. Koppers, 2010. Lō`ihi Seamount. Oceanography 23(1): 72-73.

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