P31A-2050
RIS4E at Kilauea’s December 1974 Flow: Lava Flow Texture LiDAR Signatures

Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Patrick Whelley1, William Brent Garry1, Stephen P Scheidt2, Jacob E Bleacher3 and Christophe Hamilton2, (1)NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, United States, (2)University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States, (3)NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, MD, United States
Abstract:
High-resolution point clouds and digital terrain models (DTMs) are used to investigate lava textures on the Big Island of Hawaii. Lava texture (e.g., ʻaʻā and pāhoehoe) depends significantly on eruption conditions, and it is therefore instructive, if accurately determined. In places where field investigations are prohibitive (e.g., on other planets and remote regions of Earth) lava texture must be assessed from remote sensing data. A reliable method for doing so remains elusive.

The December 1974 flow from Kilauea, in the Kau desert, presents an excellent field site to develop techniques for identifying lava texture. The eruption is young and the textures are well preserved. We present results comparing properties of lava textures observed in Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS) data. The authors collected the TLS data during May 2014 and June 2015 field seasons. Scans are a quantitative representation of what a geologist, or robotic system, sees “on the ground” and provides “ground truth” for airborne or orbital remote sensing analysis by enabling key parameters of lava morphology to be quantified. While individual scans have a heterogeneous point density, multiple scans are merged such that sub-cm lava textures can be quantified.

Results indicate that TLS-derived surface roughness (i.e., de-trended RMS roughness) is useful for differentiating lava textures and assists volcanologic interpretations. As many lava types are quite rough, it is not simply roughness that is the most advantageous parameter for differentiating lava textures; rather co-occurrence patterns in surface roughness are used. Gradually forming textures (e.g., pāhoehoe) are elevated in statistics that measure smoothness (e.g., homogeneity) while lava with disrupted crusts (e.g., slabby and platy flow) have more random distributions of roughness (i.e., high entropy). A similar technique will be used to analyze high-resolution DTMs of martian lava flows using High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment DTMs. This work will lead to faster and more reliable volcanic mapping efforts for planetary exploration as well as terrestrial geohazards.