Rocks of Norway

Colorful garnet peridotite

Norway is geologically very versatile because it has gone through lots of different geological environments during the last three billion years and because it is a mountainous country.

Gabbro sample with augite phenocrysts
Gabbro with augite phenocrysts. This rock comes from a quarry near Tangen. Gabbro is used in Norway as an aggregate. Width of sample 11 cm.

Mountains usually do contain lots of different lithologies, especially when they are older like the Caledonides of Norway are. Another bonus is that mountainous terrain is well exposed and Norway is an especially nice example in this regard.

The rocks shown below were photographed during the summer of 2015. I spent about three weeks in Norway in two separate trips. These samples are from various localities in southern, western, and northern part of the country. Only the middle section of the country between Trondheim and Fauske is missing.

I make no attempt to present an overview of all the rock types that can be found in Norway. That would be an overwhelmingly complicated task. Norway is a land of outcrops. One could spend a lifetime studying rocks there and still would literally only scratch the surface. However, I do hope that this introduction gives you a general overview of what types of rocks can be found in Norway and perhaps would encourage to go and take a look with your own eyes.

The most useful resources for me during the planning phase of the trip were a book The Making of a Land – The Geology of Norway1 and the online version of the Bedrock Map of Norway (Nasjonal berggrunnsdatabase).

In many cases I have written more about these rocks or processes forming them in specific articles. Please check the links provided in the captions.

Nepheline syenite is not a common rock type, but in Norway it occurs in several localities. This particular variety is known as foyaite and it was collected near Larvik in southern Norway. Width of sample 16 cm.
A beautifully colored iron ore sample. It contains mostly hematite with goethite and chert. It is a sedimentary exhalative type of ore, which is associated with black smokers. So it was once part of an oceanic crust. Svinsås, Løkken ophiolite. Width of sample 13 cm.

Colorful garnet peridotite
Mg-garnet pyrope showing its characteristic purple color. The rock is peridotite which is common deep in the mantle, although usually it isn’t so beautifully colored. Other minerals here are green chromian diopside and yellow olivine. The picture was taken near Åheim. Width of view 25 cm.

Ultrahigh-pressure metamorphoses mafic rocks into beautiful and bright eclogites which occur in many locations in western Norway. Green mineral is omphacite, red is garnet. Width of view 12 cm.
Rhomb-porphyry is a very rare rock type, but it has a highly recognizable appearance, which makes it well-known not only in southern Norway, but also in Denmark and Germany where they occur as part of a glacial drift. Oslo Rift, Norway.
Alkali feldspar granite as a simple pegmatite from Nyelv, Norway. Width of view 50 cm.
Tillite that formed during the Varangian glaciation, which was a global event known as the Snowball Earth. Tillite is a lithified unsorted glacial sediment. Varanger. Width of sample 1 meter.
Folding is a common phenomenon in weathered mountainous areas. This outcrop is composed of lithified mud which we know as shale.
Magnesite with serpentine. Rocks like this form as a result of hydrothermal metamorphism of ultramafic rocks. Width of sample 24 cm.
Dolomite is a rock type that forms when calcite of limestone is replaced by dolomite (mineral). The process is known as dolomitization. Trollholmsunden in the northern part of the country. Width of sample 13 cm.
Hornblendite is an ultramafic rock that is mostly composed of only one mineral — hornblende. White felsic magmatic veins are composed of feldspar and quartz. Varanger, Norway. Width of sample 50 cm.
Limestone with mudstone layers
Layers of mudstone (dark) in limestone. Biri, Oppland, Norway. Width of sample 9 cm.
Sövite was named after the Søve village in southern Norway. It is a strange igneous rock that resembles limestone. This rock type was once considered to be very rare but now we know already more than 500 carbonatite occurrences worldwide. Width of sample 16 cm.
Quartzite as a metamorphosed sandstone is a very common rock type in Norway. Width of sample 9 cm.
Phlogopite (Mg-rich biotite group mineral) forming a rock type that is composed of almost pure mica — glimmerite. This rock type is part of a mafic pegmatite — hydrothermal fluids came from the gabbroic rocks, which explains why the mica is rich in magnesium. The more common pegmatites usually host iron-rich biotites. Ødegården Verk, Norway. Width of sample 14 cm.
Dark ultramafic rock (close to the peridotite-pyroxenite boundary) with a very large garnet crystal. Such ultramafic rocks probably originate from the mantle wedge above the subduction zones where the rocks got enriched in recycled material that enabled the growth of the large garnet crystals. Hullvann, Norway. Width of sample 18 cm.
Caption
Amphibolite is a common rock type in Norway and it often hosts garnet porphyroblasts. Width of sample 16 cm.
Pegmatite occurrences in Norway are numerous. Biotite is among the most common minerals in these rocks. This sample is from Evje in southern Norway. Width of sample 11 cm.
Larvikite is a national rock in Norway. It is quarried in southern Norway near Larvik and used widely as a dimension stone. Larvikite is a variety of monzonite. Width of sample 15 cm.
Pyroxenite sample from southern Norway. Hullvann, Norway. Width of sample 8 cm.
Plagioclase is the most common mineral in the Earth’s crust and in Norway there is no shortage of it either. It is the main constituent of anorthosite (widespread in southwestern Norway) and a major component in gabbro, granulite, pegmatite, etc. This crystal comes from a pegmatite from Evje. Pay attention to the long grooves which is the best diagnostic feature of plagioclase feldspars. Width of sample 12 cm.
An ultramafic rock dunite with metamorphic alteration patches composed of chlorite. Width of sample 11 cm.
Biotite gneiss rock sample
Biotite gneiss. Gneiss is another rock type that is very widespread in Norway, especially in the western part of the country. This particular sample comes from the southern Norway. Width of sample 14 cm.
Anorthosite is the dominant rock type in the southwestern corner of Norway. This is almost monomineralic rock, containing little else than plagioclase feldspar. Width of sample 13 cm.
Norite
Norite is a rock type named after Norway. Norite is similar to gabbro but dominant pyroxene is orthopyroxene. Width of sample 8 cm.
Ilmenite
Ilmenite is among the most important mineral resources of Norway. When we leave oil and gas aside, of course. In this sample gray ilmenite crystals are embedded in an anorthositic host rock. Width of sample 13 cm.
Phyllite rock sample
Phyllite is a metamorphosed mudstone with good fissility and shiny cleavage surfaces. The rock is from western Norway. Width of sample 14 cm.
Norway is not only metamorphic-igneous terrain. It also contains lots of different sedimentary rocks, including sandstone. Width of sample 11 cm.
The unfinished reactions between the adjacent mineral phases — metamorphism in progress. Garnet is between pyroxene and plagioclase as a result of a chemical reaction between them. This is known as the corona texture. I’ve found similar rocks in several locations in Norway. These rocks are granulites or more specifically coronite granulites. Holsnøy, Norway. Width of sample 13 cm.
Norway is famous among geologists as a country of eclogites. These beautiful “christmas rocks” occur in several localities. This one comes from the Holsnøy. Width of sample 9 cm.
Dunite
Dunite is an ultramafic rock that is composed of almost pure olivine. This rock is so pure that it is mined as a source of this industrial mineral. Gusdal quarry. Width of sample 9 cm.
Chlorite schist sample
Various kinds of schists are widespread in Norway. Green color is given to this rock by chlorite. Width of sample 14 cm.
Epidosite
The main minerals here are epidote and quartz. This assemblage probably comes from the lower part of the oceanic crust and the rock type is named epidosite. Løkken ophiolite. Width of sample 12 cm.
Limestone breccia south of Lillehammer. It may be a tempestite. This is a rock that forms when strong storm waves in a shallow water violently disturb the sediments, which are then redeposited and will be lithified as a breccia.
Slightly stretched quartzite clasts in conglomerate near Bergen.
Mafic dike cutting through migmatites in southern Norway.
Olivine is a rare mineral in sand. I have written about olivine beaches before: Is Papakolea the only green beach. It seems that it is not. One seems to be in Norway, although this one is not an entire beach. This sand is on the bottom of a small creek running through almost pure dunite (olivine rock) but olivine sand it definitely is.
An outcrop of weathered yellowish dunite.
Pyroxenite often forms layers in ultramafic peridotitic rocks. Here is a brighter layer of garnet pyroxenite in a garnet-bearing peridotite.
Kannesteinen Rock in western Norway reminds me a similar rock formation in Death Valley (Mushroom Rock). They may be similar in appearance, but their formation mechanisms are different. Mushroom Rock is disintegrated in the lower part of the structure by the growing salt grains. Kannesteinen rock, on the other hand, seems to be a victim of constant pounding by waves and small rocks carried by them. There is also a difference in lithology: Mushroom Rock is composed of diabase, Kannesteinen Rock is made of gneiss. Another similar formation I have written about is in Tenerife: The Roque Cinchado.
Charnockite is a rock type often described as an orthopyroxene granite, but in the majority of cases this rock is clearly metamorphic, not magmatic like a proper granite ought to be. Charnockitic rocks are common in the Lofoten archipelago. Flakstadøya. Width of sample 9 cm.
Troctolite is a member of the gabbro family. It is composed of olivine and plagioclase but contains almost no pyroxene. Width of sample 15 cm.
A skarn from southern Norway. Pink mineral is alkali feldspar, green is tremolite-actinolite. I have written about the likely formation process of this rock sample in an article about biotite. Width of sample 9 cm.
A hornblende-scapolite rock. It is a metamorphosed gabbro in which plagioclase has been replaced by scapolite and pyroxene by hornblende. Ødegården Verk, Norway. Width of sample 13 cm.
Banded iron formation
An iron ore consisting of alternating bands of quartz and magnetite. Such rocks are named banded iron formations. The vast majority of all the iron we use comes from these rocks. The sample is from the Bjørnevatn mine in northern Norway. Width of sample 9 cm.
A metamorphic assemblage of garnet, magnetite and quartz. It could be a metamorphosed heavy mineral deposit (placer). The Varanger peninsula. Width of sample 18 cm.
Slate rock sample
Slate is a metamorphosed mudstone. It splits easily into thin plates. This rock type is common especially in the northern part of the country. Friarfjord quarry in northern Norway. Width of sample 27 cm.
Gabbro pegmatite
Pegmatitic metagabbro in which pyroxene has been altered to hornblende. The Seiland igneous province. Width of sample 9 cm.
Harzburgite is a subtype of peridotite. It is a depleted rock — a residue of partial melting that yielded basaltic magma. The Seiland igneous province. Width of sample 10 cm.
Norway has been an important exporter of graphite. Although the famous Skaland mine is closed now, the production continues at the nearby Trælen quarry. This sample comes from the Skaland mine. Width of sample 10 cm.
Amphibolite sample.
Simple amphibolite is a mixture of light-colored plagioclase and dark hornblende. Senja Island. Width of sample 9 cm.
Pegmatite that contains two common minerals (biotite and garnet). But very unusual is that this is all there seems to be. No feldspars or quartz. Garnet crystals have well-developed crystal faces. Width of sample 13 cm. Senja, Norway.
Glimmerite — pure biotite rock (also known as biotitite). Senja Island. Width of sample 25 cm.
Pure graphite from the Trælen quarry. Width of sample 21 cm.
Mangerite is a charnockitic rock but it is monzonitic, not granitic like true charnockite. Mangerite is named after a locality in Norway near Bergen, but this rock sample comes from the Lofoten Islands. Width of sample 10 cm.
Dolomite marble
Dolomarble (marble composed of dolomite) from Fauske. Fauske is famous for its various marble varieties. Width of sample 14 cm.
Colorful variety of conglomeratic marble, which is composed of white dolomite, reddish calcite, and green mica fuchsite. Width of sample 20 cm.
Marble
Calcitic marble from Fauske. Width of sample 19 cm.
Mica schist rock sample
Garnet-mica schist is a common rock type in various parts of Norway. This sample comes from Narvik. Width of sample 14 cm.

References

1. Ramberg, I. B. et al. (2008). The Making of a Land – The Geology of Norway. Geological Society of Norway.

Ingredients of pegmatite

Pegmatites are unusually coarse-grained igneous rocks. They also often contain exotic minerals but even the really common ones are spectacular because of their size. Here you can see four very common minerals that in many cases make up the majority of the rock.

Large crystals of quartz, muscovite, plagioclase, microcline from a pegmatitic rock
The ingredients of a common pegmatitic rock: quartz (W), muscovite mica (N), plagioclase with oligoclase composition (O), and microcline (S). These crystals are large (each one roughly 10 cm across) and they all come from a pegmatite from the same place. Evje, Norway.

Plagioclase and microcline are both feldspars and muscovite is a very common mica. Actually I should have added biotite here as well. This is dark mica which is also often in the mix. The four minerals above were together in one rock and there were no biotite. But few hundred meters away was another quarry that had beautiful biotite flakes as well. So I will add another photo to do justice to iron mica which is rarely missing in a classic pegmatitic rock.

Biotite from pegmatitic granite
Biotite from a granitic pegmatite. Width of sample 11 cm. Evje, Norway.

And here they are all together in one pegmatitic rock. Almost all, muscovite is missing:

Monzogranitic pegmatite
Pegmatite with a monzogranitic composition. Evje, Norway.

Chert and chalk of Stevns Klint

About a month ago I was invited to Denmark to speak about geology and rocks of Stevns Klint to young students of Copenhagen Estonian School (Københavns Estiske Søndagsskole). The school had a field trip with bicycles to interesting locations, including the coastal cliff which is world-famous among geologists. Why famous? It is one of the best K/T boundaries and it was the site where the radical theory of meteorite-driven end-Cretaceous extinction event was developed.

The cliff is composed of chalk and bryozoan limestone (lower and upper part of the klint, respectively) and a hard to notice narrow band of clayey material between them which happens to be abnormally rich in iridium. This is a metal that is rare on Earth but abundant in iron meteorites. The meteorite itself hit the Earth in Mexico but the consequences were truly global as demonstrated by this UNESCO World Heritage Site in Denmark.

The rock face also contains lots of chert (flint) nodules which are very common in Cretaceous chalks. The entire rocky coastline is composed of them because they are very resistant to abrasion, especially when compared to much softer limestones. But hardness does not mean that they are hard to break into pieces. Actually, it is quite easy and the result is lots of knife-sharp edges which were exploited by our stone age ancestors. Playing with these rocks was much more fun to most of the children than paying attention to stories about dinosaurs and iridium-rich clay.

Chert (flint) on the coast at Stevns Klint in Denmark.
All of the boulders here are made of chert but you have to break one into pieces to see the smooth and curving fresh surface with sharp edges. White material is chalk.

Stevns Klint in Denmark is a world-famous K-T boundary.
Stevns Klint in Denmark. If one would make a list of places every geologist should try to visit, Stevns Klint would surely be a strong candidate to be included.

My son
I had my children with me as well. Here is my son looking for fossils in chalk in an abandoned chalk quarry. This chalk is very rich in fossils (brachiopods, sea urchins, bryozoans, corals, etc.) which made everyone busy and happy 🙂

Discovering Norway

I have been discovering Norway for a week now by driving from one interesting location to another. So far it has been a highly successful trip. I have seen and photographed many outcrops and managed to collect beautiful rock samples.

Today and also tomorrow I will visit outcrops around Bergen with a Norwegian geologist Ole Tjugen. He has read my blog before and kindly invited me to stay at his home and organized a field trip to interesting places around.

It is my first visit of this kind – to be hosted by someone who is a reader of my blog. I am glad to have that opportunity. It is a great chance to really see the best of what particular location has to offer and of course I can not deny that it is enjoyable to sleep in a bed after spending several days in a tent.

Siim Sepp Ole Tjugen
Here we are in front of an outcrop of metamorphosed anorthosite.

Quartzite conglomerate
We saw some wild geology today. Here is a very beautiful outcrop of conglomerate from the Ordovician. The clasts are slightly flattened but compositionally there is little change because the clasts are made of quartzite.

Map of Africa in rocks

While hiking under the magnificent Imi n’Ifri natural bridge in Morocco I was stopped by two local boys who pointed at something behind me and said few explaining words in French. My French is extremely poor but the word Afrique was still understandable. Here is what I saw:

Contour of Africa under Imi n'Ifri natural bridge
Well, it is not a perfect shape of Africa but the resemblance is still quite astonishing.

This is something that could potentially bring quite a number of tourists to this spot but unfortunately the locals have made no efforts to exploit it. At least no intelligent efforts like information boards, websites, etc. Except these two boys who, by the way, did not ask any money for it (which is somewhat unusual in this part of the world).

Imi n’Ifri natural bridge is made of limestone. There is a river flowing under the bridge and the bridge itself is pretty high. Perhaps 50 meters from the river to the arch or maybe a bit less but it was beautiful and well worth a visit. A roundtrip down and back up should take about an hour and you do not need a guide 🙂

River under the natural bridge of Imi n'Ifri in Morocco
Here is a closer look of the limestone and the river cutting its way through it.

Nautiloids of Morocco

I recently returned from a three week geological field trip to Morocco. This country is full of very versatile geology. Lots of structures (especially nicely folded sedimentary rocks), minerals, and rock types. And of course also fossils. Morocco is famous for its ammonites but there are also lots of trilobites and nautiloids from older Paleozoic rock strata.

Today I am focusing on the latter. These nautiloid fossils are locally known as Orthoceras although I am a bit sceptical that this is indeed the correct name. According to the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, real Orthoceras (Orthoceras regulare) comes from my home country Estonia and adjacent areas. The coiled-shape fossils are often called ammonites but in this case it can not be because true ammonites did not occur before the Mesozoic. But they are cephalopods for sure. If someone more familiar in paleontology happens to read it, I would gladly welcome more specific names given to these fossils.

Dark gray rock containing these fossils is limestone from the Ordovician. The width of view is from 40 cm (closer shots) to about two meters. Yellow material in the cracks is desert sand. These photos were taken about 20 km away from the Algerian border in the Sahara desert. Closest Moroccan settlement is Erfoud.

Nautiloid (cephalopod) fossils in Ordovician limestone in Morocco Nautiloid (cephalopod) fossils in Ordovician limestone in Morocco Nautiloid (cephalopod) fossils in Ordovician limestone in Morocco Nautiloid (cephalopod) fossils in Ordovician limestone in Morocco Nautiloid (cephalopod) fossils in Ordovician limestone in Morocco Nautiloid (cephalopod) fossils in Ordovician limestone in Morocco Fossil trader in Morocco

Local traders on bikes arrive fast as soon as we arrived. The same pattern repeated itself in many places. The goods they are offering are local and genuine (actually made of the very same limestone we are standing on) and pretty inexpensive according to European standards. Of course you can not accept the price they are initially asking. It takes some practice but generally it is easy to agree for about 50% of the initial price or even less. I bought the plate with a nice nautiloid fossil right next to the man for six euros. I am sure it was a good trade for both of us although he asked for 12 euros as a starting price.

Volcanic gases

Hot lava flow

Volcanic gases are volatile substances released from a volcano or volcanically active area. Volcanic gases are always involved in volcanic eruptions, but they are often given off by passively degassing (dormant) volcanoes as well. Volatile substances are chemical elements or compounds dissolved in magma that form a gas at relatively low pressure and temperature3.

Geothermal area in Iceland near Lake Myvatn
Geothermal area in Iceland near Lake Myvatn is a beautiful place with unpleasant odor of hydrogen sulfide.

Composition of volcanic gases

It was once believed that each volcano has its own particular type of gas: sulfur dioxide at Etna, hydrogen chloride at Vesuvius, carbon dioxide at Puracé (Colombia), etc. In 1850s it was demonstrated by a French mineralogist Charles Sainte-Claire Deville to be untrue3. But each volcano nevertheless has its own character (average mixture of different gas species) which is a result of magma composition, tectonic setting, degassing depth, interactions with groundwater and hydrothermal systems, crustal composition, etc.

The most important constituent of volcanic gas is water vapor (forms about 90% of all the gases1) although the concentration is lower (about 60%) in gases coming directly from craters3. The next most important gas species is carbon dioxide (CO2) which makes up about 10…40% of gases. Sulfur compounds sulfur dioxide (SO2) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) are also very important. Chemical elements Cl, F, and Br occur as acids (combined with hydrogen from water to form hydrochloric, hydrofluoric, and hydrobromic acid). They are also very common constituents although their composition is highly variable. Hydrogen (H2), carbon monoxide (CO), methane (CH4), sulfur (S2), nitrogen (N2), ammonia (NH3), oxygen (O2), and rare gases occur in smaller amounts. Numerous metals are also present (Pb, Zn, Cd, Hg, Cu, Bi, Na, K) at trace levels. They are mostly transported as chlorides and fluorides2.

Hazardous sulfurous volcanic gas
Volcanic gases in Hawaii are rich in carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide. Flank of Kilauea between Pu’u O’o and coast.

Degassing of Halemaumau crater in Hawaii
Degassing magma at the Halema’uma’u pit (collapse) crater within Kilauea summit caldera in Hawaii.

Krafla geothermal area
Icelandic landscape near the Krafla Volcano. Rocks in the foreground are covered with minerals (sulfur, gypsum) precipitated out from volcanic gases.

The sources of volcanic gases

There are three principal reservoirs which provide volatile components to form volcanic gas.

  • The mantle
  • The crust
  • The atmosphere & hydrosphere

The material from the mantle dominates if the volcano itself is fed by a material from deep below. This is the case with hot spot volcanism under the oceanic crust. Good example is Hawaii. These volcanoes emit mixtures of gases that are relatively rich in sulfur and carbon compounds but, importantly, contain little water. This is the very reason that explains why Hawaii and similar island volcanoes far away from the continental margins are not very explosive – they do not emit much water vapor. It is the buildup of gases within the volcanic edifice that results in explosive behavior.

Volcanic gases of the volcanoes on the continental margins (the Ring of Fire volcanoes surrounding the Pacific Basin, for example) are compositionally more versatile and variable because they also incorporate the crustal material which may have a highly variable composition. These volcanoes are generally explosive in nature because their magma is thick (more siliceous composition hinders the release of volatile substances) and it also contains lots of water which expands more than 1000 times when it goes from dissolved state (within magma) into separate gaseous phase.

Mudpot in Iceland
Mudpot is a type of fumarole. Acidic volcanic gases corrode the surrounding rocks, turning them into watery slurry which appears to be boiling because of bubbling. This mudpot is in Iceland near Krafla volcano.

Where does that water come from? There are two main sources. This type of volcanism is associated with subduction zones. Subducted slabs of oceanic crust carry hydrated minerals beneath the continental crust where they start releasing water because of immense pressure. This water additionally helps to melt the rocks which start to rise as liquid magma and will eventually create a chain of volcanoes on the continental margin (like The Cascades, for instance). This water was originally part of the hydrosphere-atmosphere system but because it went through the subduction process it is no longer considered to be a part of it. Another major source of water in volcanic gases is meteoric water. This is basically rainwater either directly or indirectly through water bodies containing rainwater. The hydrosphere-atmosphere system does not only provide water but also substances that are dissolved in water (oxygen and other atmospheric gases). The particular mixture of volcanic gases is therefore highly dependent on local conditions.

It is also worth mentioning that volcanic gas (or part of it) does not need to be a result of magma degassing. It may be just groundwater heated by nearby volcanism. Volcanic gases may be released from summit craters but also from cracks on the flanks (fumaroles) or they may be released diffusively through the ground (especially nonreactive species like CO2 and He3).

caption
Sulphur Springs, Saint Lucia. Saint Lucia is a volcanic island located on top of a subduction zone.

The influence of volcanic gases on climate and environment

Scientists are obviously studying volcanic gases to gain an insight into the inner workings of a volcano to be better prepared for future eruptions. But it is also very interesting to study the gases because they have immensely influenced the composition of the Earth’s atmosphere (and also hydrosphere) in the past and continue to do so in the future as well.

The Earth’s atmosphere and hydrosphere influence the composition of volcanic gases to great extent but it is interesting to note that both the atmosphere and hydrosphere are the results of magma degassing. All of the major constituents (nitrogen, carbon dioxide, water) of these geospheres are volcanic in origin (notable exception is oxygen). The primordial Earth was probably entirely molten. As soon as it cooled the water started to accumulate in lower areas as rainwater condensed from volcanic clouds of steam. Primordial atmosphere was also very rich in carbon dioxide. Current level 0.04% may seem much to us because only a few decades ago it was 0.035%. It is a major and very rapid change most likely caused by human activity. But the Earth has seen times when the level of CO2 has been many tens of times higher. Even during relatively recent history (recent when compared with the entire 4.5 billion years of Earth’s history) when dinosaurs ruled the Earth there were at least five times as much CO2 in the air. Consequently the average air temperature was also significantly higher (about 22 °C) because of more intense greenhouse effect.

sulfur geothermal area Iceland
Sulfur precipitated from volcanic gases in Iceland, Krafla Volcano. Sulfur compounds (especially sulfur dioxide) have a potential to severely affect the climate and environment.

Volcanic gases are therefore highly influential variables modifying the Earth’s climate but the way they influence it is by no means simple and straightforward. Carbon dioxide and many other volatile compounds released from volcanoes (like water vapor and sulfur dioxide) are potent greenhouse gases but some substances have the opposite cooling effect. SO2 especially is noteworthy for both cooling and warming role. It warms the atmosphere as a greenhouse gas but it also forms sulfuric acid aerosols which can stay in the stratosphere for several years and have a clearly cooling effect as a haze that backscatters incoming solar radiation.

The vast majority of volcanic eruptions have very limited and local effect on climate and environment. This is because (1) the amount of gases released is small, (2) the eruption does not last long enough, (3) the eruption cloud does not reach high enough to penetrate into the stratosphere. The latter is very important because tropospheric aerosols will be washed out within a week. The duration is also very important because in order to have a long-lasting effect on the environment the ocean-atmosphere climate system must come to equilibrium with volcanic perturbations. That is not going to happen if the eruption lasts only few months even if it is relatively powerful.

Geothermal area near Strokkur in Iceland
Geothermal area near Strokkur (the most famous geyser in Iceland) in Iceland.

The most severe effect on climate comes from very large-scale and long-lasting basaltic eruptions which are known as flood basalt events. Why does the eruption need to be basaltic? Does not common silicic eruption contain more volcanic gases? Yes, it is true but these gases that cause powerful silicic eruptions are largely composed of water vapor which will not wreak havoc on the Earth’s climate and environment. Basaltic eruptions on the other hand contain more sulfur dioxide which has much more potential to cause long term environmental harm. Flood basalt events are so influential because of powerfulness, long duration, and lots of sulfur.

Nowadays scientists are more and more linking flood basalt formations with major extinction events in the Earth’s history. The extinction of dinosaurs 65 million years ago has long been associated with the impact event on the Yucatán peninsula which undoubtedly had a negative effect on the environment. On the other hand, it is unlikely to be the only culprit because it was instantaneous event which had short-lived effects. It seems more likely that we need hundreds if not thousands of years to constantly alter the ocean-atmosphere chemistry to cause mass extinctions. Further credit to this hypothesis comes from the fact that while the End-Cretaceous extinction event which ended the rule of dinosaurs is associated with the Deccan flood basalt event. Another and much more severe extinction event 250 million years ago is also coeval with a major flood basalt formation in Siberia.

While volcanoes may be responsible for large extinction events they also probably have saved life on Earth at least once. About 650 million years ago. This time in the Earth’s history is known as the Snowball Earth event. Most of the Earth was covered with ice which significantly increased the reflectiveness (albedo) of the Earth which helped to cool the Earth even further. It should be a situation with no return to normal conditions. However, somehow it happened. Probably because of intensified volcanic activity which pumped large amount of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

Volcanoes and volcanic gases in particular have a significant and complicated role in modifying the climate and atmosphere. We know that current background level of volcanism is not significantly contributing to global warming or altering the Earth’s environment. But the Earth’s history has demonstrated clearly that they have a power to do so.

Fumarole on Kilauea Iki lava lake in Hawaii
Fumarole on Kilauea Iki lava lake in Hawaii.

Hazards associated with volcanic gases

Volcanic gases seem to be a relatively minor hazard if we count the casualties while keeping the fatalities caused by the pyroclastic density currents (PDC) aside. PDCs are very deadly but this phenomenon is usually treated separately because it is not only a fiery gas cloud but also a mixture of variously sized rocky material. Although the overall number of deaths caused by volcanic gases is relatively modest, asphyxiation is definitely not a pleasant way to die. What are the dangers then and what can be done to avoid them?

Most of the common constituents of volcanic gases are hazardous to humans and other living forms in elevated concentrations. The main culprits causing deaths or health problems are carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, hydrochloric acid, hydrofluoric acid, and sulfuric acid.

Volcanic gas, Halemaumau crater
Volcanic gases rising from the summit caldera of Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii.

Carbon dioxide

Carbon dioxide is harmless in small quantities (0.04% of air is CO2) but can cause almost instant coma if concentrated enough. CO2 is odorless and colorless and denser than air. It means that the danger is difficult to detect but we have to make sure that in volcanically active areas we will think twice before going to explore any kind of holes, craters or depressions because they may be full of this gas. Carbon dioxide has caused large number of casualties associated with volcanic gases. Especially famous is the Nyos Lake event which killed 1700 people in Cameroon. I am not going into details because this event is already well described elsewhere and second because it is a remarkable but by no means widespread event. There are only two instances (Nyos and Nearby Monoun Lake events in 1986 and 1984, respectively) when such a rapid large scale release of carbon dioxide from lakes are documented4.

Carbon dioxide is also lethal to vegetation although in smaller quantities all green plants need it for photosynthesis. Even large trees can be killed if there is so much CO2 in the soil that the roots of trees can not absorb oxygen anymore. The most famous such area is in the Inyo National Forest in California. My personal funny and sad story associated with this place is that although I consider myself a hobby photographer of everything geological I apparently failed to take a picture of this place although I saw these dried trees there with my own eyes. It happens, I suppose, especially if you are stupid enough to think that dead trees have nothing to do with geology.

Sulfur dioxide

Sulfur dioxide has a distinct sharply penetrating odor which is detectable already in concentrations as low as 1 ppm (one part per million). I remember one breath on the flanks of Kilauea near flowing lava which was so sharply irritating to my nose that made me instantly turn and run. It was the smell of SO2 in concentration well above 1 ppm. Perhaps you have felt it also. When lighting a match too close to your nose you may feel a burning and unpleasant sensation which is caused by the same sulfur compound. Sulfur dioxide reacts with water in the air to form sulfuric acid which precipitates as acid rain and also backscatters radiation from the Sun, thereby lowering the average temperature.

Sulphur Banks, Hawaii. Kilauea volcano
Volcanic gases are often rich in sulfur, especially lavas of mafic composition. Bright yellow mineral is elemental sulfur. Sulfurous fumarole is known as solfatara. Sulphur Banks, Hawaii.

Hydrogen sulfide

Hydrogen sulfide is another toxic gas which also has distinct and rather unpleasant smell often associated with rotten eggs. That, I am afraid, is not too helpful for most of the people because rotten eggs seem to be a hard to find curiosity nowadays. Anyway, this sulfur compound and its odor are easily noticeable and very common in volcanically active areas. That gas is also heavier than air and tends to concentrate in lower areas. In 1971 six downhill skiers in Japan died almost instantly when passing through a depression filled with it4. Many other volcanic gas related fatalities are also directly associated with this sulfur compound.

HCl and HF

Fumes coming from volcanic areas are acidic not only because of sulfuric acid but also because of hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride. The first one is the principal constituent of gastric acid and carried also in a small bottle by every serious field geologist because it makes an easy test for carbonate rocks (to determine whether it is limestone or dolostone). HCl is not really very serious threat to our lives (although it has caused fatalities, of course) but it contributes to acid rain, does cause breathing problems and is irritating to the eyes. In Hawaii, lava haze (or laze) is forming when molten lava flowing to the sea initiates a chemical reaction between salt ions dissolved in seawater and water which results in hydrochloric acid. Hydrofluoric acid (HF) is also used by geologists but this time in laboratories in carefully controlled conditions because this substance is really nasty stuff. It is extremely irritating to the skin and burns heal slowly. Contact with the eyes will cause serious burns and blindness if not removed immediately with running water.

http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Rocks#5877841693091516370
Lava laze (lava + haze) in Hawaii. This cloud of smoke is composed of water vapor but it also contains lots of hydrochloric acid. It rises from the place where lava flows onto the sea from a lava tunnel.
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Rocks#5877841703074302994
Hydrochloric acid forms as seawater reacts with salt (sodium chloride) dissolved within it.

So what can we do to avoid dangers associated with volcanic gases. It is really easy. Stay away from volcanoes and nothing bad happens. However, if this is not what you wanted to hear then I recommend to definitely avoid lower areas where dense gases can accumulate and also try to pay attention to the wind direction. Try to stay windward (upwind) from the sources of volcanic gases and if you really have to go to really dangerous places then you hopefully already know what you are doing because you are a professional volcanologist with a good gas mask and protective clothing.

Geothermal area in Iceland near Viti Maar
Geothermal area in Iceland near Viti Maar with mudpots and yellow sulfur.

Fumarole in Iceland
Muddy fumarole (mudpot) in Iceland.

Mudpot in Iceland
Another mudpot in Iceland.

References

1. Jackson, J. A. (1997). Glossary of Geology, 4th Edition. American Geological Institute.
2. Gerlach, T. M. (1999). Volcanic Gases. In: Encyclopedia of Geochemistry (Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series) (Ed. Marshall, Clare P. & Fairbridge, Rhodes W.). Springer. 656-657.
3. Delmelle, Pierre & Stix, John (1999). Volcanic Gases. In: Encyclopedia of Volcanoes (Ed. Sigurdsson, H.). Academic Press. 803-815.
4. Williams-Jones, Glyn & Rymer, Hazel (1999). Hazards of Volcanic Gases. In: Encyclopedia of Volcanoes (Ed. Sigurdsson, H.). Academic Press. 997-1004.

Types of Lava Flows: Pahoehoe, Aa, Pillow & Blocky Lava Explained

Lava flow is a surficial outpouring of molten rocks. The same name is also given to already solidified rock bodies that formed as molten or semi-molten flows of rocky material. Lava flows are the most common volcanic feature on Earth. They cover roughly 70% of the Earth and are also very common on other terrestrial planets, covering 90% of Venus and 50% of Mars5.

Types of lava flows
1. Red hot basaltic lava flow. Hawaii. 2. Blocky lava. La Palma. 3. Slowly solidifying pahoehoe lava flow. Hawaii. 4. Pillow lava. Iceland. 5. Transition from smooth pahoehoe to rubbly aa. Hawaii. 6. Columnar lava. Northern Ireland.

Lava flows are very common features on planet Earth although the vast majority of them are hidden from us in the deep ocean basins. The lava type associated with submarine volcanism – pillow lava, is therefore underrepresented where ordinary people have a chance to see it.

The most common way to divide lava flows into distinct types is following: Pahoehoe lava flow, Aa lava flow, Blocky lava flow, and also Pillow lava flow. Sometimes Turbulent lava flow is also added, but the latter is only of theoretical interest to scientist because we will not see that type of lava flow in the nature.
Turbulent lava flows may have been present billions of years ago when the interior of the Earth and consequently lava flows as well were significantly hotter and the composition of lava was less siliceous. That enabled the lava to flow more easily and turbulently.
The most common subaerial lava flows today are pahoehoe, aa, and blocky lavas.

Glowing lava forming new land in Hawaii. Kilauea volcano, Pu'u O'o vent.
Lava surface is cooling very rapidly. The temperature of glowing lava is at least 475 °C. Bright yellow is hotter (over 1000 °C) and orange cooler (800…900 °C). Dull red colors indicates a temperature in the range of 600…700  °C. Lava surface may cool from bright yellow to dull red within minutes. Pu’u O’o vent, Kilauea volcano.

Pahoehoe lava

Pahoehoe is a smooth and continuous lava crust. Pahoehoe forms when the effusion rate is low and consequently the velocity of lava flow is slow2. Pahoehoe lava flow is usually at least 10 times slower than typical aa lava flow5. Higher effusion rate results in lava flow being shattered which is how the rubbly and clinkery aa lava surface forms. Pahoehoe and aa lava are strikingly different in appearance, but their composition may be identical or very similar. Lava flow that was originally pahoehoe may transform into aa lava but the reverse is impossible — once lava crust is broken it can not return back to smooth and continuous form3.
Only low-viscosity (usually basaltic) lava can form pahoehoe. Aa lava is much more common and is not as picky about the composition of lava flow. Aa lava can be basaltic, andesitic, tephritic, etc. Blocky lava needs more felsic compositions (silica content generally over 55%). Blocky lava is composed of larger blocks than aa lava and these blocks have much smoother surface.
Best known examples of pahoehoe lava flows are from the Big Island of Hawaii and the term ‘pahoehoe’ itself (just as ‘aa’) originates from the Hawaiian language. Pahoehoe is also known as ropy lava and it has several more varieties named entrail, festooned, filamented, sharkskin, shelly, etc4.

Four images of lava flows from Kilauea
Pahoehoe lava flows. Kilauea volcano, Pu’u O’o vent.
Forming basaltic pahoehoe lava flow in Hawaii. Such lava flows move slowly and are not overly dangerous when compared with some other volcanic phenomena.

Roof of a house buried under lava flow in Hawaii
However, their destructive power is practically unstoppable. You can easily walk away from a lava flow like that in most cases, but you will not be able to save your house if it happens to be on the way of such a slow-moving disaster. Here is all that is left of a house engulfed by a pahoehoe lava flow. Although it is possible to predict which regions are in danger of being covered by lava flows, people, if allowed, stubbornly continue to build their houses in these districts. Destruction that inevitably follows keeps the attention of public focused on these flows and provides money for scientists studying them.

Solidifying basaltic lava flow.
Hawaiian lava from the Kilauea volcano (Pu’u O’o vent).

Hazardous sulfurous volcanic gas
Lava flows are often imagined as fiery rivers of molten rock. That is indeed often the case, but it is also very common that there is no easily defined boundary of an active lava flow. The lava often flows largely underground. When I was hiking in Hawaii with a clear target in my mind to find an active lava flow I was perplexed and amazed when I suddenly discovered that I am actually standing right in the middle of such a flow. There were no river of lava. The red glowing material was just seeping out of the ground here and there, some in front of me and some already behind.

This is potentially very dangerous situation not so much because of lava itself because it moves slowly and contrary to popular belief it is impossible to sink into it. But because of toxic volcanic gases that are involved with all types of lava flows. I tried to be very careful, trying to observe the flows so that the wind was blowing the gas away from me. Here is a picture of volcanic gas seeping out from the ground. If you are also trying to find flowing lava, always try to keep a safe distance with such a thick cocktail of hazardous gases and pay attention to the wind direction.

Basaltic lava flow of Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii
Pahoehoe lava flows form a beautiful and otherworldly barren landscape in southern part of Hawai’i.

Lava flow in Hawaii

A hole in a lava flow
Walking on a pahoehoe lava flow is relatively easy, especially when compared with walking on an aa-type lava flow which is practically impossible undertaking. However, hiking on a smooth lava surface is not without some nasty surprises. As mentioned earlier, lava crust solidifies quickly, but the interior keeps moving which often leaves empty space beneath the thin surface. It can easily break when you step on it which may result in badly scratched legs because the edges of a broken lava flow are razor sharp. Or even worse, you might have a broken leg which understandably is a major problem if you are miles away from nearest roads. Through practice hikers will learn relatively quickly where it is safer to step and where it pays to be extra careful. Generally speaking, smaller lava lobes are safer and larger gently sloping, but otherwise relatively smooth parts are the most dangerous ones.

Thurston lava tunnel in Hawaii
This image shows also that voids in lava flows are a common feature. Such a long tunnel-like caves are called lava tunnels. Large amount of lava can move through these tunnels which makes it easier for a volcano to grow itself laterally larger. This is a Thurston lava tunnel in Hawaii. Lava tunnels are especially common within silica-poor basaltic lavas.

This lava flow formed on La Palma, Canary Islands during the eruption of Cumbre Vieja rift in 1949 (Hoyo del Banco vent). Examples like that can be also described as ropy lava which is a subtype of pahoehoe. The wrinkled surface of ropy lava is a result of the interior of the lava flow moving more quickly than the exterior.
Coulée
Coulée is a volcanic landform which is an intermadiate stage between lava dome and lava flow. The lava that forms coulée is too thick to flow like a normal lava flow. However, it may resemble huge pahoehoe flow (this coulée is more than 50 meters wide) when gravity forces it to flow downhill just a little and the slightly more easily flowing interior warps the surface just like it does in a ropy pahoehoe flow. Light-colored mound in the foreground is composed of pumiceous lapilli. Picture taken in Tenerife, Canary Islands.

Aa lava

Aa lava is a rough rubbly crust of a lava flow. It is a major lava flow type. Other important subaerial lava flow types are pahoehoe and blocky lava.

Aa and pahoehoe are terms that were brought to geological terminology from the Hawaiian language. Aa is according to native Hawaiians a sound one makes if he or she tries to walk barefoot on such a lava flow. There are different spelling versions, ‘a’a, a’a, a-aa are used as well as simple aa. Pahoehoe means in Hawaiian “on which one can walk”6.

Walking on it is very slow and potentially dangerous even if one has good hiking boots. It is such a miserable experience because the uppermost part of aa lava is composed of loose clinkery unstable blocks. You can never be sure that the rocks you are stepping on do not move. They often do. This means that ground beneath your feet is unstable and you may easily lose balance. It is no good if that happens because the edges of fresh aa lava rubble may be very sharp. Sometimes aa lava blocks are so big that one has to climb over them. It makes moving progress very slow and bare hands will get scratched for sure.

One thing that in my opinion is often poorly understood is the fact that aa and pahoehoe are terms that only describe the upper part of a lava flow. It is more correct to say that aa lava is a type of lava flow crust, not lava flow itself. Both aa lava and pahoehoe are usually massive beneath the crust which may be smooth (pahoehoe) or rubbly (aa). Massive part usually contains vesicles (gas bubbles) which will fill with secondary minerals like zeolites in older lava flows. This process takes considerable time and requires low-temperature hydrothermal alteration. There are no amygdules (vesicle filling mineral masses) in historic lava flows.

Aa lava is more common than pahoehoe. Special conditions are needed for pahoehoe to form: lava with low viscosity (high temperature, low silica content), low effusion rate, and gentle slope. Aa lava is free of such restrictions and therefore forms instead of pahoehoe if the conditions are not right. It is usually the speed of advancing lava flow that determines whether aa or pahoehoe forms and that depends on the effusion rate and steepness of the slope. It has been shown that flow rates exceeding 5-10 m3/s clearly favors the formation of aa lava over pahoehoe on Hawaii3. Once aa lava is formed it never reverts back to smooth pahoehoe form.

Pahoehoe and aa lava types.
Here you can see both smooth pahoehoe and irregular aa lava types. Hawaii.

Pahoehoe-type lava flow in Hawaii
This beautiful cascade of lava in Hawaii is largely composed of pahoehoe type lava flow, but in the left-hand side some lava tongues have broken to form aa instead of pahoehoe.

Pahoehoe and aa lava
Pahoehoe lava flow in the center that have partially covered the aa-type flow in Hawaii.
Lava flow formed in 1949 on La Palma in the foreground. It is almost completely aa lava. Pahoehoe forms only small part of it.
Aa lava in the foreground near the western coast of La Palma, Canary Islands. This lava flow formed during the eruption of Cumbre Vieja in 1712.
Aa lava and The Atlantic Ocean near the southern tip of La Palma.
Here is a nice exposure near the southern tip of La Palma which shows the internal structure of aa lava. Here are two lava flows. Lower part of the flow is massive lava which has a rubbly surface. And on top of it is another aa lava flow.
And here is whole mountainside in La Palma composed of many such lava flows.
Aa lava on the floor of the Las Cañadas caldera in Tenerife, Canary Islands.
Columnar basalt at Giant's Causeway
The interior of a lava flow may be columnar because of thermal contraction. However, really beautiful regularly shaped columns like these form usually in a stationary well insulated lava lake not in an actively moving lava flow. Giant’s Causeway, Northern Ireland.

Blocky lava

Blocky flows are common if the silica content of lavas is higher (composition of basaltic andesite to rhyolite)5.
Blocky lava flows resemble aa lavas. They also have highly irregular surfaces covered with debris, but they contain larger lava blocks with smoother sides and angular edges with common dimensions from few decimeters to several meters. Blocky flows grow higher as they advance and may reach more than 100 meters in height3.

Blocky lava flow
Here is a blocky flow (formed in 1712) from La Palma, Canary Islands. Blocks are angular and have much smoother sides than separate pieces of aa lava.

Blocky lava flow in Nea Kameni island in the caldera of Santorini
Blocky flows may be tens of meters high. Nea Kameni island in the caldera of Santorini, Greece.

Blocky lava flow in Nea Kameni island in the caldera of Santorini
Andesitic blocks. Nea Kameni, Santorini.

Blocky lava flow in Nea Kameni island in the caldera of Santorini
Nea Kameni, Santorini.

Pillow lava

Pillow lava is usually basaltic or andesitic in composition and always associated with water. Pillows are about one meter across each or smaller and form when lava flows out of the Earth’s crust underwater. Each pillow is like a bag that has quickly chilled margin which is filled with molten material. Pillow lavas are usually associated with mid-ocean ridge volcanism. The upper part of the oceanic crust is composed of countless number of lava pillows, but they can also form in much shallower conditions, even in lakes or under glacial ice.
Some sources do not even mention pillow lava as a type of lava flow1. Possibly because lava flows are generally distinguished by their extreme elongation downslope. Pillow lava, however, is composed of many pillow-shaped outpourings, each one of them slightly elongated but not forming a continuous flow.
Pillows usually demonstrate a convex upper and concave or flat lower surface. The surfaces are glassy because of very rapid cooling in contact with water.

Pillow lava
Pillow lava near Fasoula. Troodos Ophiolite Complex, Cyprus.

Pillow lava in the Mathiatis open-pit mine, Cyprus. Note radial cracks which are characteristic to pillow lavas and help them to be distinguished from spheroidal weathering which may create very similarly shaped rocks. These cracks are a result of cooling and are radial because they are perpendicular to the cooling front.

pillow lava, Caldera de Taburiente, La Palma
Pillow lava in the Caldera de Taburiente, La Palma, Canary Islands.

Pillow lava
Pillow lava in Iceland. Note the convex upper and concave or flat lower surfaces.

You can find more images of pillow lava from the Troodos Ophiolite Complex here: Pillow lava in Cyprus.

References

1. Sigurdsson, H., (Ed.). (1999). Encyclopedia of Volcanoes. Academic Press.
2. Walker, George P. L. (1999). Basaltic Volcanoes and Volcanic Systems. In: Encyclopedia of Volcanoes (Ed. Sigurdsson, H.). Academic Press. 283-289.
3. Francis, P. & Oppenheimer, C. (2003). Volcanoes, 2nd Edition. Oxford University Press.
4. Jackson, J. A. (1997). Glossary of Geology, 4th Edition. American Geological Institute.
5. Kilburn, Christopher R. J. (1999). Lava Flows and Flow Fields. In: Encyclopedia of Volcanoes (Ed. Sigurdsson, H.). Academic Press. 291-305.
6. Schmincke, Hans-Ulrich (2005). Volcanism. Springer.

Coastal rocks of Saint Lucia

The pictures below were taken while I was kayaking along the western coast of Saint Lucia. The rock formation below is conglomerate and on top of it seems to be a volcanoclastic sedimentary unit.

These pictures nicely demonstrate the two dominant natural forces shaping this island – Earth’s internal heat expressed as volcanic eruptions and slower but no less powerful sunshine-driven processes which disintegrate and wear down rocks to form conglomerate among other sedimentary rocks.

Coastal cliff of Saint Lucia composed of conglomerate and volcanoclastic rocks Coastal cliff of Saint Lucia composed of conglomerate and volcanoclastic rocks Coastal cliff of Saint Lucia composed of conglomerate and volcanoclastic rocks Coastal cliff of Saint Lucia composed of conglomerate and volcanoclastic rocks Coastal cliff of Saint Lucia composed of conglomerate and volcanoclastic rocks Coastal cliff of Saint Lucia composed of conglomerate and volcanoclastic rocks

Green Sand Beach

Green Sand Beach or Papakolea Beach is located near the southern tip of Hawaii (Big Island). It is not the only green sand beach in the world (I’ve written about that before: Is Papakolea the only green beach) but it is definitely the most famous. It was one of the highlights of my Hawaii trip.

http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089765220994354
Green Sand Beach and an eroded tuff cone Pu’u Mahana.

Green sand is largely composed of mineral olivine which is common in Hawaiian volcanic rocks but it is very uncommon mineral in sand in most circumstances because olivine decays rapidly. Only the toughest minerals survive for a long time in a harsh environment like sand. Green Sand Beach is a natural curiosity and a must-visit location for every geologist visiting Hawaii. It is, by the way, very good bay for swimming.

Green olivine comes from eroded tuff cone that is constantly pounded by the seawaves. There is a picture about this greenish tuff below.

http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089774857858642
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http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089804040001810
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http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089823769647586

Is Papakolea the only green beach
Papakolea beach in Hawaii.

http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089836017624546
Layered tuff that is the source of olivine.
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089845276903490
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089887654741442
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089893608844210
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089907448776242
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089910010812530
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089925287938610
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089935197780562
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089956639450722
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089957324924194
The beach is several kilometers away from paved road. It is possible to go there on four wheels but as you can see the road conditions are quite extreme sometimes. I preferred to walk and enjoy the scenery.
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089994663779490
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089991106111074
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881090006115093874
Olivine-rich tuff.
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089774208087458
http://picasaweb.google.com/107509377372007544953/Hawaii#5881089864699131602