Abstract

Submerged carbonate reefs are preserved as a series of submarine terraces between Molokai and Hawaii along a 200‐km span of the southeastern Hawaiian Ridge. Limestones from two of the terraces have been sampled from submersibles and dated radiometrically at 13 and 120 ka. Recognition that the terraces are tilted permits assignment of about a dozen terraces from 150 to 1300 m depth to eight general reef platforms. These reefs were drowned by the combined effects of island subsidence and sea level rise at the end of successive glacial stages from 13 to 647 ka. The platforms are tilted 5 m/km southeast toward the locus of volcanic loading centered on the island of Hawaii. The end of the active period of volcanic shield building is represented on each nonactive volcano by a submerged change in slope. Dating of this slope change by reference to the dated reefs provides independent evidence that shield building ended at about the same time that the volcano changed from eruption of tholeiitic to alkalic basalt. The variation in depth of the dated tilted reefs along the ridge indicates that the end of subsidence follows the end of shield building by about one half million years. The present northwest margin of major subsidence probably crosses southeast Maui. During the last half million years the rate of southeast migration of the beginning of both subsidence and of tholeiitic volcanism does not appear to have increased. However, the rate of southeast migration of the end of both subsidence and of tholeiitic volcanism has apparently increased. This shortening of the life history of the younger volcanoes implies an increase in eruption rates.

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