Hawaii, The Land of Funny Rocks - About Pahoehoe, A"a, Pele"s Tears and Pele"s Hair
Hawaii is exotic, yes, but also unique.
It is the most isolated island archipelago on earth; it has the most diverse landscapes on earth; it contains most of the climate zones of our planet, from arctic tundra to tropical rainforest.
Hawaii has the largest and most active volcanoes on earth and it is home to over half the endangered species in America.
So many visitors tend to stay within the precincts of their resort, or only visit a couple beaches and the major towns...
they truly cheat themselves of some of the most unusual and absolutely fascinating landscapes and captivating scenery on earth.
Hawaii's exotic landscape tells an intriguing story to those curious enough to look.
The visitor who goes the extra distance, who has the curiosity to seek, to peer, to look and to hear as well as the heart to learn and to feel and to love the land, will be rewarded richly with a visit of profoundly greater depth and value.
It is obvious, then, to even the most causal observer that various lava formations and lava fields of Hawaii display two distinctly, kind of bizarre, different types of lava flows.
Some flows are very smooth, with obvious, well-preserved flow structures, looking almost like poured taffy that has hardened.
Others appear more clunky, clinkery and jagged like a field of sharp boulders and cobbles.
These two unique rock types result from two distinctly different types of lava flows, Pahoehoe and A'a.
The onomatopoetic word "pahoehoe" flows across your tongue in the same fashion that pahoehoe lava flows down the volcano.
Gelatinous and smooth, it looks a bit like small waves with bulbous, lobate "toes" at the front of the flow.
As the advancing lobe cools, a thin crust forms on its surface.
This crust is expanded and broken by the pressure of lava flowing in behind, in a continually advancing flow.
A distinctive breaking-glass sound is made when that cooling crust fractures, which can be disorienting and surprising at first.
The Hawaiian word "pahoehoe" means "to paddle a canoe vigorously" or "well stirred" and indeed, pahoehoe lava has the look of water being furiously paddled by canoeists, or indeed, of well-stirred poi.
These highly fluid pahoehoe flows form from the hottest lava with high dissolved fluid content.
As the lava cools and de-gasses, the second kind of flow, a'a lava, is formed from it.
A'a flows travel along as a dense mass of highly viscous lava covered in sharp, broken shards called clinkers.
Like a tractor tread, a'a clinkers fall off the advancing front of the flow and are buried as the flow moves forward over them, sounding for all the world like a herd of wild bulls has run amok in the world's largest china shop.
A'a lava, which cools to great piles of razor sharp clinkers, has given rise to the myth that its name derives from Hawaiians walking across the cooled a'a barefoot, wincing and saying "Ah! Ah!" with every cringing step.
In fact, the word "a'a" in Hawaiian not only means "to blaze or glow" but also "to dare or challenge".
It is a testament to the toughness of Hawaiian warriors that when choosing the site for a battle field, inevitably they chose to fight on an a'a field-using the razor sharp a'a strewn along the landscape as a weapon in and of itself.
Flows generally emerge from the volcano as pahoehoe and change to a'a as they cool and de-gas or as they are subjected to stress and strain forces.
It is especially common to find pahoehoe flows changing to a'a in the midst of a steep drop over a cliff, or when butted-up against an impediment to flow.
Like the cucumber becoming a pickle, once pahoehoe turns to a'a, it will never turn back into pahoehoe.
A couple other strange kinds of rocks are also worth mentioning.
Where fire fountains and geysers of lava occur, Pele's hair and Pele's tears will form.
Pele's hair are thin, fiber-like strands of basalt glass pulled and spun from the lava fountain by the blowing wind and resemble nothing so much as the spun glass used in aquarium filters.
Pele's tears are the droplet-sized, cooled splashes of basalt glass that come from showering, spraying lava.
Both are abundant along the younger landscapes, if you just stop, look and explore.
After all, isn't that what you came here for?
It is the most isolated island archipelago on earth; it has the most diverse landscapes on earth; it contains most of the climate zones of our planet, from arctic tundra to tropical rainforest.
Hawaii has the largest and most active volcanoes on earth and it is home to over half the endangered species in America.
So many visitors tend to stay within the precincts of their resort, or only visit a couple beaches and the major towns...
they truly cheat themselves of some of the most unusual and absolutely fascinating landscapes and captivating scenery on earth.
Hawaii's exotic landscape tells an intriguing story to those curious enough to look.
The visitor who goes the extra distance, who has the curiosity to seek, to peer, to look and to hear as well as the heart to learn and to feel and to love the land, will be rewarded richly with a visit of profoundly greater depth and value.
It is obvious, then, to even the most causal observer that various lava formations and lava fields of Hawaii display two distinctly, kind of bizarre, different types of lava flows.
Some flows are very smooth, with obvious, well-preserved flow structures, looking almost like poured taffy that has hardened.
Others appear more clunky, clinkery and jagged like a field of sharp boulders and cobbles.
These two unique rock types result from two distinctly different types of lava flows, Pahoehoe and A'a.
The onomatopoetic word "pahoehoe" flows across your tongue in the same fashion that pahoehoe lava flows down the volcano.
Gelatinous and smooth, it looks a bit like small waves with bulbous, lobate "toes" at the front of the flow.
As the advancing lobe cools, a thin crust forms on its surface.
This crust is expanded and broken by the pressure of lava flowing in behind, in a continually advancing flow.
A distinctive breaking-glass sound is made when that cooling crust fractures, which can be disorienting and surprising at first.
The Hawaiian word "pahoehoe" means "to paddle a canoe vigorously" or "well stirred" and indeed, pahoehoe lava has the look of water being furiously paddled by canoeists, or indeed, of well-stirred poi.
These highly fluid pahoehoe flows form from the hottest lava with high dissolved fluid content.
As the lava cools and de-gasses, the second kind of flow, a'a lava, is formed from it.
A'a flows travel along as a dense mass of highly viscous lava covered in sharp, broken shards called clinkers.
Like a tractor tread, a'a clinkers fall off the advancing front of the flow and are buried as the flow moves forward over them, sounding for all the world like a herd of wild bulls has run amok in the world's largest china shop.
A'a lava, which cools to great piles of razor sharp clinkers, has given rise to the myth that its name derives from Hawaiians walking across the cooled a'a barefoot, wincing and saying "Ah! Ah!" with every cringing step.
In fact, the word "a'a" in Hawaiian not only means "to blaze or glow" but also "to dare or challenge".
It is a testament to the toughness of Hawaiian warriors that when choosing the site for a battle field, inevitably they chose to fight on an a'a field-using the razor sharp a'a strewn along the landscape as a weapon in and of itself.
Flows generally emerge from the volcano as pahoehoe and change to a'a as they cool and de-gas or as they are subjected to stress and strain forces.
It is especially common to find pahoehoe flows changing to a'a in the midst of a steep drop over a cliff, or when butted-up against an impediment to flow.
Like the cucumber becoming a pickle, once pahoehoe turns to a'a, it will never turn back into pahoehoe.
A couple other strange kinds of rocks are also worth mentioning.
Where fire fountains and geysers of lava occur, Pele's hair and Pele's tears will form.
Pele's hair are thin, fiber-like strands of basalt glass pulled and spun from the lava fountain by the blowing wind and resemble nothing so much as the spun glass used in aquarium filters.
Pele's tears are the droplet-sized, cooled splashes of basalt glass that come from showering, spraying lava.
Both are abundant along the younger landscapes, if you just stop, look and explore.
After all, isn't that what you came here for?