Dr. Kimo Alameda, Hawai'i County Mayor-elect waves a double shaka with his Co-Campaign Manager, Bill Brilhante, along Kanoelehua Ave. on Election Day. Photo by Tim Wright |
Moses, who coordinated efforts in Kaʻū, said she is so "thrilled that he won, and for what is to come, and what he can do for Hawai'i Island." She noted that he is a supporter of the planned Hawaiian Immersion School in Wai'ohinu, and completing the sewage treatment facilities in Pāhala and Nāʻālehu. She said he has vowed to complete improvements at the parks, including lighting of playing fields, upgrades of the tennis courts in Pāhala and Nāʻālehu, swimming pool in Pāhala, restroom facility at Nāʻālehu Park and needed improvements at Ocean View Park.
Dr. Kimo Alameda, Hawai'i County Mayor-elect, receives a lei and a hug from Kaʻū Campaign Chair Raylene Auli'i Fuhjikawa Moses on Election Night at Nani Mau Gardens. Photo by Tim Wright |
Moses said Alameda's forte is "to bring the people together," and to create a positive, civil discussion. She said he has a talent in helping people to feel comfortable so they can talk together to solve problems.
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THE ART & SCIENCE OF GEOLOGIC MAPPING is the title of this week's Volcano Watch, the weekly article and activity update by U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates. This column is by HVO geologist Drew Downs: Geologic mapping has been one of the most fundamental mandates of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) since its establishment in 1879. Congress
created the USGS to "classify the public lands and examine the geological structure, mineral resources, and products within and outside the national domain." The famous western US explorer John Wesley Powell (also the second director of the USGS) convinced Congress into authorizing the "preparation of the geological map of the United States." The first geologic maps were uniform in size and contained all available information on topography and geology, with accompanying text describing mapped geology. But sometimes too much information on a map can make it difficult to read and interpret. Modern maps tend to be more versatile; displaying geologic deposits (also commonly referred to as map units) and features of special interest for a project or investigation.
Modern geologic mapping efforts have centered more around investigations that are deemed of critical importance, such as those vital to energy (oil and gas) and economic (minerals and ore deposits) resources, surface and groundwater resources, urban development and land use. The last one is of particular importance as the Earth is a dynamic place and understanding the locations and ages of past volcanic (lava flows and tephras) and tectonic (faults and fractures) features gives us a blueprint for where and when future activity may occur.
Geologic maps are not an exact depiction of the Earth's surface. Instead, geologic maps display a generalization of interested units and features in correspondence with the scale of a map. If mapping is done at a small scale, which would be zoomed out to show a large area, then smaller geologic units and features might not be able to be accurately displayed. In the end, everything depends on the scale being used and what the geologic mapper is trying to portray.
Examples of Hawaii geologic maps. The lefthand map is a USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory map created on September 17, 2024, within hours of remote sensing (helicopter overflight) of the eruption that occurred from September 15–20, 2024. Several age ranges for lava flows of interest are noted by color changes, with those that erupted from 1790–2018 in purple (older lava flows are gray), those erupted on September 15 in pink, and those erupted September 16–17 in red (with the active fissure as a yellow line). This map also shows roads and the boundary of Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, as these would be of interest to those using this map. The righthand geologic map is that of the Island of Hawaiʻi from the Geologic Map of the State of Hawaii by Sherrod and others (2021). This map was compiled through decades of work and displays the various lava flows, tephra deposits, and other rock and sediment types mapped through fieldwork and remote sensing. The primary purpose of this geologic map is to show all mappable geologic units with their colors denoting their source volcano and age. This map is free to download at https://pubs.usgs.gov/publication/sim3143. |
John Wesley Powell, explorer and second director of USGS, convinced Congress to authorized "preparation of the geological map of the United States." |
Volcano Activity Updates
Mauna Loa is not erupting. Its USGS Volcano Alert Level is at NORMAL.
A brief increase in earthquake activity at Kamaʻehuakanaloa volcano (formerly Lōʻihi Seamount) took place November 1-2. More than 100 events were detected, the largest of which was a M4.3. Activity could have been related to magma movement, but past eruptions at Kamaʻehuakanaloa have been accompanied by thousands of earthquakes over days to weeks.
One earthquake was reported felt in the Hawaiian Islands during the past week: a M4.8 earthquake 5 km (3 mi) SW of Pāhala at 38 km (23 mi) depth on Nov. 5 at 1:42 a.m. HST. This event was part of the ongoing swarm of deep seismicity that has been occurring beneath the Pāhala area since 2019
HVO continues to closely monitor Kīlauea and Mauna Loa.
So far this year, there have been 814 DUI arrests compared with 805 during the same period last year. This is an increase of 1.12 percent.
HPD’s Traffic Services Section reviewed all updated crashes and found 832 major crashes so far this year, compared with 711 during the same time last year. This represents an increase of 17 percent.
To date, there were 23 fatal crashes, resulting in 25 fatalities (two of which had multiple deaths, one was reclassified as suicide, one reclassified as a medical condition, and two died at a later date), compared with 13 fatal crashes, resulting in 14 fatalities (one of which had multiple deaths, one died at a later date, and one crash reclassified as a medical condition) for the same time last year. This represents an increase of 76.9 percent for fatal crashes and 78.6 percent for fatalities.
To date, the non-traffic fatality count so far this year is 0 compared to 0 non-traffic fatalities (not on a public roadway) for the same time last year.
HPD promises that DUI roadblocks and patrols will continue island wide.