The Hawaiian Archipelago - Six Months Among The Palm Groves, Coral Reefs, And Volcanoes Of The Sandwich Islands By Isabella L. Bird
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This Is A Very Interesting Spot To Hawaiian Antiquaries.
They
argue, from the amount of the chippings, that this mass of phonolite
was quarried for ages by countless generations of men, and that the
mountain top must have been upheaved, and the island inhabited, in a
very remote past.
The stones have not been worked since Captain
Cook's day; yet there is not a weather-stain upon them, and the air
is so dry and rarified that meat will keep fresh for three months.
I found a mass of crystals of the greenish volcanic glass, called
olivine, imbedded in a piece of phonolite which looked as blue and
fresh as if only quarried yesterday.
We travelled for miles through ashes and scoriae, and then descended
into a dense afternoon fog; but Mr. S. is a practised mountaineer,
and never faltered for a moment, and our horses made such good speed
that late in the afternoon we were able to warm ourselves by a
gallop, which brought us in here ravenous for supper before dark,
having ridden for thirteen hours. I hope I have made it clear that
the top of this dead volcano, whether cones or ravines, is deep soft
ashes and sand.
To-morrow morning I intend to ride the thirty miles to Waimea with
two native women, and the next day to go off on my adventurous
expedition to Hilo, for which I have bought for $45 a big, strong,
heavy horse, which I have named Kahele. He has the poking head and
unmistakable gait of a bullock horse, but is said to be "a good
traveller."
I.L.B.
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