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Paperback Kilauea : The Newest Land on Earth Book

ISBN: 0896102041

ISBN13: 9780896102040

Kilauea : The Newest Land on Earth

Dramatic photography and engaging text combine to capture the true beauty and spirit of Kilauea Volcano on the island of Hawai'i. Included is information on the volcano's history, geology and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Who says they're not making real estate any more?

In 1985, Big Island photographer Dorian Weisel obtained a special use permit from Hawaii Volcanoes National Park that allowed him to take his camera close to the continuous but ever-changing eruption of Kilauea. Weisel's photographs are, literally and figuratively, incandescent. The most fascinating are views into lava tubes -- misshapen blast furnaces that could have been prototypes for the Western vision of hell, except that Mediterranean volcanoes don't let photographers get as close to the action as Hawaii's "shield" volcanoes do. Weisel's pictures are nicely married to a short, clear history of Kilauea since the first non-Hawaiian visit, in 1832. Christina Heliker, a park geologist who gave up glaciers for volcanoes after the 1980 explosion of Mt. St. Helens, also explains in simple terms what makes Kilauea work. The scale of Kilauea is inconceivable, even up close. For 24 years now. it has pumped 650,000 cubic yards of lava a day onto the island of Hawaii, yet this mighty effort has added only a thin covering of rock to a tiny district. The hotspot that feeds this, the world's busiest volcano, has been pumping out rock in more or less the same quantities continuously for 70 million years. A fountain of liquid rock soaring 1,500 feet into the air is awe-inspiring, but that lasts just hours. Kilauea goes on for centuries, and below the ocean, the same unimaginable engine is also building Loihi, a new Hawaiian island expected to break the surface in about 10,000 years. Though this book covers many of the personalities of Kilauea, Madame Pele always has something new. Since "Kilauea: The Newest Land on Earth" went to the printers in 1990, the lava has begun forming a dangerous, thin shelf over the sea, which collapses and creates a beach of black cinders, then reforms. This is Madame Pele's idea of a tourist trap. Despite warnings from rangers, idiots will venture out onto the shelf, and from time to time one is swallowed up.

Visually stunning!

"Kilauea - Newest Land on Earth" offers brilliant photos of Kilauea eruptions along with background and history of Hawaiian volcanoes. While most of the book is photographs, there are also sections on Kilauea (which offers general information about shield volcanoes and the island's history)and the Pu'u O'o and Kupaianaha eruptions. If you are wanting to learn a lot about the technical aspects of volcanoes, this may not be the book for you. However, if you want to SEE and get a feel for Kilauea, then this is it!
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