Littoral cones not primary volcanic Volcano and distinguishing between a littoral cone and a primary vent can be difficult. A littoral cone forms when lava flows from land into water. Interaction between the water and the lava leads to steam explosions. These explosions throw lava fragments into the air; under favourable circumstances these fragments pile up on land and form a cone. This activity may resemble that of fire fountaining, and produces tephra columns, lava bubbles, steam blasts and lava fountains. Repeated phases of magma-water mixing lead to the formation of bedded deposits. The steam explosions can lead to the formation of Pele's hair. There are two types of such cones, depending on whether the magma-water mixing was free or whether it occurred in an enclosed environment; the former produces typical phreatomagmatic deposits, the latter more ash-poor cones than the former.
The forming lava flows need to be sufficiently large; the minimum size of lava flows that have formed such cones in Hawaiʻi is . Of these, about 5-6% of their volume is converted to fragments. Usually littoral cones are formed by ʻaʻā lava as their fragmented nature allows ideal water-lava interactions, but pāhoehoe and intermediary lavas can also form littoral cones. Other properties such as the speed of the lava flow and the structure of the flow front also influence the formation of littoral cones. Larger lava flow rates generate larger cones. In some littoral cones in Hawaiʻi that were formed by pāhoehoe lava flows, the collapse of a lava bench and subsequent steam explosions formed the cones instead. can also form littoral cones, one such cone has been found on Lombok and formed during the 1257 Samalas eruption.
Prehistorical littoral cones have been found on the coast of Hawaiʻi, where the volcanoes Mauna Loa and Kīlauea face the sea. They were named "littoral cones" by Wentworth in 1938. About 50 large cones are found on these two volcanoes and only three of them were formed during historical times; no such cones have been found on the other Hawaiian volcanoes. The Puʻu ʻŌʻō and Mauna Ulu eruptions of Kīlauea have also formed small littoral cones.
Examples of littoral cones include Sand Hills (1840 eruption) on Kīlauea in Hawaiʻi, ʻAuʻau, Nā Puʻu a Pele, Puʻu Hou (1868 eruption) and Puʻu Kī (eruption 1300 years ago) at Mauna Loa in Hawaiʻi, a cone close to Villamil at Sierra Negra, Galapagos, several cones south of Krýsuvík and Eldborg (1800 years ago) at Hengill both on Iceland, a cone in the Winter Water unit of the Columbia Plateau, Oregon, several cones along the shores of Lake Kivu in East Africa, a cone at Becharof Lake, Alaska, Burilan and Devil Rock on Gaua, and Ponta de Ferraria (eruption 840 ± 60 years ago) on São Miguel Island, Azores. The Speedwell Vent in Derbyshire, United Kingdom may also be a littoral cone of Carboniferous age. Pleistocene littoral cones may also exist in Lake Tahoe, California, while Archean littoral cones may have formed in the Barberton Greenstone Belt of South Africa.
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