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Photo glossary of volcano terms

Glowing tree mold on Kilauea Volcano, Hawai`i

Photograph by K. Shickman on 23 January 1990

A tree mold glows several hours after pahoehoe lava surrounded a tree and burned its trunk until the tree fell onto the lava flow; the trunk is visible in upper right. The glow is from the hot lava below.

Tree mold
Fluid basaltic lava may preserve the shapes of trees and other objects by solidifying around them. Tree molds are formed when lava surrounds a tree, chills against it, and then drains away. The standing structure left behind is often called a lava tree.

Tree trunks engulfed and incinerated by lava leave cylindrical hollows, or tree molds, where lava solidified against them; tree molds often preserve the original surface texture of the tree. Tree molds are found within standing lava trees and on the surfaces of lava flows. They are common in pahoehoe flows and occasionally found in `a`a flows.

More images of lava tree molds

 

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U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, California, USA
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Last modification: Monday, 04-Sep-2000 22:49:03 EDT (SRB)