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Lake at summit of Mauna Kea is almost gone

COURTESY U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
looking north, at what remained of Lake Waiau on September 26, 2013. The water area was just 15 meters (yards) wide at this time. Prior to 2010, the lake occupied the entirety of the now-dry lake bed, which is about 100 meters (yards) wide. The astronomical telescopes at the summit off Mauna Kea are visible on the skyline.

Scientists at the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory say Lake Waiau, the tiny body of water just below Mauna Kea’s summit has been shrinking at  an alarming rate and has almost disappeared.

Since 2010, the lake has shrunk from about 1.2 to 1.7 acres to about .03 acres, 2 percent of its normal surface area, according to this week’s Volcano Watch article.

The lake had been about 3 yards deep, but the water level is now less than a foot, meaning the water volume has shrunk to about 1 percent of its 2010 size, according to measurements by former University of Hawaii Hilo professor Donna Delparte.

Observatory scientists, Office of Mauna Kea Management rangers and state land and wildlife officials have been monitoring the disappearing water. But they are still trying to figure out why the lake is disappearing.

Scientists say, based on historical photographs and written reports, that a drop of this magnitude hasn’t happened in the lake’s recorded history.

Drought may be a factor in the water loss, the Volcano Watch article said.

“The Mauna Kea visitor center weather station shows very little precipitation for several consecutive months in early 2010, which may have been a trigger for the level drop that was sustained by low precipitation over the subsequent few years. The National Drought Mitigation Center shows that the drought across Hawaii intensified in early 2010,” observatory scientists said.

But there could be other factors.

Lake Waiau is a “perched” water body, in which water is held in a depression by an impermeable substrate of layers of silty clay, interbedded with ash layers, and possibly permafrost, the article said.

Scientists are also wondering if the permafrost that surrounds the lake may have altered the water balance.

Scientists are asking residents with historical photographs of the lake to contact them by email at askHVO@usgs.gov.

“Given its cultural significance and its uniqueness, the disappearance of Lake Waiau would be a great loss for Hawaii. The future is far from certain for Lake Waiau, and DLNR (Department of Land and Natural Resources), rangers, and scientists will continue to watch this situation,” the Volcano Watch article said.

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