Large landslides from oceanic volcanoes

Abstract
GLORIA sidescan sonar surveys have shown that large landslides are ubiquitous around the submarine flanks of Hawaiian volcanoes, and GLORIA has also revealed large landslides offshore from Tristan da Cunha and El Hierro. On both of the latter islands, steep flanks formerly attributed to tilting or marine erosion have been reinterpreted as landslide headwalls mantled by younger lava flows. Large landslides have also been inferred from several oceanic islands elsewhere by other workers using different evidence, and we suggest that seacliffs previously attributed to marine erosion of many additional islands may instead be headwalls of still other landslides. These landslides occur in a wide range of settings and probably represent only a small sample from a large population. They may explain the large volumes of archipelagic aprons and the stellate shapes of many oceanic volcanoes. Large landslides and associated tsunamis pose hazards to many islands.