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Deposit from a giant wave on the Island of Lanai, Hawaii

January 1, 1984

Limestone-bearing gravel, the newly named Hulopoe Gravel, blankets the coastal slopes on Lanai. The deposit, which reaches a maximum altitude of 326 meters, formerly was believed to have been deposited along several different ancient marine strandlines, but dated submerged coral reefs and tide-gauge measurements indicate that the southeastern Hawaiian Islands sink so fast that former worldwide high stands of the sea now lie beneath local sea level. Evidence indicates that the Hulopoe Gravel and similar deposits on nearby islands were deposited during the Pleistocene by a giant wave generated by a submarine landslide on a sea scarp south of Lanai.

Publication Year 1984
Title Deposit from a giant wave on the Island of Lanai, Hawaii
Authors J. G. Moore, G. W. Moore
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70013399
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse