Northeastern Section - 40th Annual Meeting (March 14–16, 2005)

Paper No. 6
Presentation Time: 2:40 PM

MID-QUATERNARY VEGETATION OF THE HONOLULU PLAIN (OAHU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS)


WOODCOCK, Deborah, Dept. of Geography, Clark Univ, Worcester, MA 01610, DWoodcock@clarku.edu

Pyroclastic rocks of the Honolulu Volcanic Series (Salt Lake eruption) preserve plant macrofossils dating from the mid-Quaternary (250,000-470,000 BP). Ashfall and pyroclastic surge deposits contain leaves and other plant parts documenting the existence of two lowland communities, a shrubland of Hawaiian cotton (Gossypium tomentosa) and a dry forest community with Kanaloa kahoolawensis (a nearly extinct woody legume); Sapindus oahuensis (soapberry); Prichardia sp. (loulu palm); and other dryland taxa. Fossil material in an associated lahar deposit shows that nearby slopes supported forests of Cordia subcordata (kou), Sapindus oahuensis, Pritchardia, and other taxa. These assemblages are a record of the vegetation of the dry lowlands of the Hawaiian Islands at least a hundred thousand years before the advent of humans.