Reexamining the potential to classify lava flows from the fractality of
their margins
Abstract
Can fractal analysis of a lava flow’s margin enable classification of
the lava’s morphologic type (e.g., pāhoehoe)? Such classifications would
provide insights into the rheology and dynamics of the flow when it was
emplaced. The potential to classify lava flows from remotely-sensed data
would particularly benefit the analysis of flows that are inaccessible,
including flows on other planetary bodies. The technique’s current
interpretive framework depends on three assumptions: (1) measured margin
fractality is scale-invariant; (2) morphologic types can be uniquely
distinguished based on measured margin fractality; and (3) modification
of margin fractality by topography, including substrate slope and
confinement, would be minimal or independently recognizable. We
critically evaluate these assumptions at meter scales (1–10 m) using 15
field-collected flow margin intervals from a wide variety of morphologic
types in Hawaiʻi, Iceland, and Idaho. Among the 12 margin intervals that
satisfy the current framework’s suitability criteria (e.g., geomorphic
freshness, shallowly-sloped substrates), we show that 5 exhibit notably
scale-dependent fractality and all 5 from lava types other than ‘a‘ā or
pāhoehoe would be classified as one or both of those types at some
scales. Additionally, an ‘a‘ā flow on a 15° slope (Mauna Ulu, Hawaiʻi)
and a spiny pāhoehoe flow confined by a stream bank (Holuhraun, Iceland)
exhibit significantly depressed fractalities but lack diagnostic
signatures for these modifications. We therefore conclude that all three
assumptions of the current framework are invalid at meter scales and
propose a new framework to leverage the potential of the underlying
fractal technique while acknowledging these complexities.