Volcano Watch: How tephra deposits unlock the secrets of Kilauea volcano’s explosive past

USGS photos by J. Schmith Keanakakoʻi Tephra from unit D in Kiauea south caldera wall; the lower portion of the tephra deposit has been smoothed with a scraper tool, making the surface look different from the portion above. A) finely laminated ash layers as well as a fine ash layer and a coarser layer with pumice grains, B) microscope photo of a dense, glassy ash grain from the fine lamination layers, C) microscope photo of a small pumice grain from the coarser layer, and d) well-preserved example of a fine ash layer with accretionary lapilli.

I think the Island of Hawaii is one of the most magical places on Earth. You can literally see land in the making when one of the volcanoes is erupting. But the familiar sight of red-glowing lava flows makes it hard to imagine a time when eruptions were different, and to think that such a time may come again someday.