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 Forest Terminates Abruptly On The Great Volcanic
Wilderness, With Its Starved Growth Of Unsightly Scrub.
But
Hualalai, though 10,000 feet in height, is covered with Pteris
aquilina, mamane, coarse bunch grass, and pukeave to its very
summit, which is crowned by a small, solitary, blossoming ohia.
For two hours before reaching the top, the way lies over countless
flows and beds of lava, much disintegrated, and almost entirely of
the kind called pahoehoe. Countless pit craters extend over the
whole mountain, all of them covered outside, and a few inside, with
scraggy vegetation. The edges are often very ragged and
picturesque. The depth varies from 300 to 700 feet, and the
diameter from 700 to 1,200. The walls of some are of a smooth grey
stone, the bottoms flat, and very deep in sand, but others resemble
the tufa cones of Mauna Kea. They are so crowded together in some
places as to be divided only by a ridge so narrow that two mules can
scarcely walk abreast upon it. The mountain was split by an
earthquake in 1868, and a great fissure, with much treacherous
ground about it, extends for some distance across it. It is very
striking from every point of view on this side, being a complete
wilderness of craters, and over 150 lateral cones have been counted.
The object of my second ascent was to visit one of the grandest of
the summit craters, which we had not reached previously owing to
fog.
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