Old bombs found on Mauna Loa: The rest of the story (Part 1)
In late February, Hawaii media reported on the recent discovery of two bombs on the north flank of Mauna Loa, but details were lacking. Today, we offer more info.
In late February, Hawaii media reported on the recent discovery of two bombs on the north flank of Mauna Loa, but details were lacking. Today, we offer more info.
The two bombs were part of a cluster dropped by U.S. Army Air Corp planes on the Humu‘ula lava flow on Dec. 27, 1935. According to a 1980 study by now-retired USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) geologist Jack Lockwood and F.A. Torgerson (U.S. Air Force), 20 of them were 275 kg (600 lb) MK I demolition bombs, each loaded with 161 kg (355 lb) of TNT and armed with a 0.1 second time-delay fuse. The other 20 were “pointer bombs” (for aiming purposes) that contained only small black powder charges.
The device featured in recent media reports is one of the pointer bombs. Dr. Thomas A. Jaggar, HVO’s founder, first described this bomb during a 1939 post-eruption inspection of the area: “… a winged bomb had plunged through a thin crust into liquid lava and was intact, its nose exposed protruding down into a tunnel below.” He also found one of the demolition bombs, unexploded with several hundred pounds of TNT exposed, which was safely detonated.
The same pointer bomb was found and photographed in 1977 by Lockwood. His photo was published in his 1980 paper with the caption, “‘Pointer bomb’ that penetrated 1935 pahoehoe flow alongside channel.”
What is the significance of the pointer bomb found in 1939, 1977, and again in 2020?
Events leading up to bombs penetrating the thin pahoehoe crust of the active 1935 Humu‘ula lava flow are well known to volcanologists as the first test of using explosives to stall or divert a lava flow in Hawaii.
Destroying a lava conduit to redirect a flow is one of three basic diversion tactics. However, lava diversion is the subject of great debate in Hawaii, with concerns about the success of influencing a lava flow’s progress and whether humans should interfere with natural processes and Pele.
The first known use of this strategy was by a group of concerned citizens from Catania, Sicily, in 1669, when a large lava flow from Mount Etna threatened their town. Protected from the heat by cowhides, they used common digging tools to break open the lava conduit that fed the threatening flow, releasing lava into a new path away from Catania.
The effort was briefly successful until citizens of nearby Paterno realized that the diverted flow could reach their own city and chased off the Catanians. The hole in the conduit then sealed and the flow toward Catania resumed, ultimately reaching the city and the Ionian Sea.
In Hawaii, the use of dynamite to disrupt a lava flow was planned, but not tried, in 1881 when a Mauna Loa eruption threatened Hilo. The use of explosives was discussed again in 1929, when residents feared that an earthquake swarm on Hualalai might lead to an eruption of that volcano, but none occurred. The next opportunity came a few years later.
Following a Mauna Loa summit eruption in 1933, Jaggar predicted that a flank eruption would occur on the volcano within two years and might threaten Hilo. His prediction came true — Mauna Loa erupted in late November 1935.
During the first week, the flow moved from the volcano’s Northeast Rift Zone down its north flank and turned west, away from Hilo. But on Nov. 27, a new vent opened lower on the north flank and erupted a lava flow that went north to the base of Mauna Kea, where it ponded.
A month after the 1935 eruption began, the lava pond at the base of Mauna Kea breached, sending a flow toward Hilo. This lava flow advanced at an alarming rate of 1 mile per day.
For the previous two years, Jaggar had talked about using explosives to disrupt a lava flow that might threaten Hilo. He envisioned a land expedition carrying TNT to near the vent. But Jaggar’s friend, sugar chemist Guido Giacometti, suggested that Army planes might be able to drop explosive bombs more quickly and accurately.
So, Jaggar requested Army Air Corp assistance, which was quickly granted. On Dec. 27, 1935, 10 Keystone B-3 and B-4 biplane bombers delivered 40 bombs to two target areas on the Humu`ula lava flow, both within 1.2 miles of the Mauna Loa vent.
Did these efforts work? Next week’s Volcano Watch will lay out evidence for their success or failure.
Volcano Watch is a weekly article and activity update written by U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates.
Volcano Activity Updates
Kilauea Volcano is not erupting. Its USGS Volcano Alert level remains at NORMAL (https://volcanoes.usgs.gov/vhp/about_alerts.html). Kilauea updates are issued monthly.
Kilauea monitoring data over the past month showed no significant changes in seismicity, sulfur dioxide emission rates, or deformation. The water lake at the bottom of Halema‘uma‘u continued to slowly expand and deepen.
Mauna Loa is not erupting. Its USGS Volcano Alert level remains at ADVISORY. This alert level does not mean that an eruption is imminent or that progression to an eruption is certain. Mauna Loa updates are issued weekly.
This past week, about 70 small-magnitude earthquakes were recorded beneath the upper elevations of Mauna Loa; the strongest was a magnitude-3.7 quake on Feb. 28. A flurry of small earthquakes occurred south of the volcano’s Northeast Rift Zone, where known fault structures commonly produce shallow seismicity. Monitoring data showed that slow summit inflation continued and fumarole temperature and gas concentrations on the Southwest Rift Zone remain stable.
One earthquake was reported felt in Hawaii this past week: a magnitude-3.7 quake 11 miles northeast of Hawaiian Ocean View Estate at 1:01 a.m. on Feb. 28.
HVO continues to closely monitor both Kilauea and Mauna Loa for any signs of increased activity.
Visit https://volcanoes.usgs.gov/observatories/hvo/ for past Volcano Watch articles,for past Volcano Watch articles, Kilauea and Mauna Loa updates, volcano photos, maps, recent earthquake info, and more. Email questions to askHVO@usgs.gov.