The Hawaiian islands are actually undersea volcanoes. Most of the volcanoes are no longer active, but some continue to erupt. The sparkling black sand covering some Hawaiian beaches formed when hot lava from the volcanoes flowed into the ocean.
While it is tempting to say that we just wanted it to look different, the black sand (and green sand) found on a very few beaches is volcanic rock that has broken down to very fine particles. EXTREMELY hot to walk on in sunlight, it is a true deep glossy black. And kind of neat.
Aloha
The sand is black because it is crushed up igneous rocks. Igneous rocks are dried lava and the sand usually turns black on a ''hot spot'' like Hawaii.
Its volcanic sand
because it is
Because of eroded volcanic lava.
The beaches with black sand are volcanic in origin.
Black sand is sand that's been turned a black color either by a glossy partly-magnetic mix of sands (usually fine), or by tiny fragments of lava.Some gold and white beaches can also contain black sand, typically after storms have sorted out grains where heavier, darker particles remain on the surface.There are many black sand beaches around the world. Prince William Sound, in Alaska, and Lost Coast, California, both have black sand beaches named Black Sand Beach. Hawaii has Kehena Beach, Oneuli Beach, Polulu Valley Beach and Kaimu Beach. Maui hosts Oneuli Beach, Honokalani Black Sand Beach and Waianapanapa Black Sand Beach. Finally, Vik Beach in Iceland has some breathtakingly blue water surrounded by eroded rock formations beyond a beach of black sand.For more black sand beaches, try a Web or Image search on Google or your favorite search engine for black sand beach. You'll be stunned by some of the amazing photos.
Red sand beaches in Hawaii are derived from the erosion of cinder cone volcanoes.
Because they are made of black volcanic sand rather than white coral sand or white quartz/limestone sand. However, Japan has also many white sand beaches, which are made of white coral sand (southern islands) and white quartz/limestone sand (peninsulas on mainlands). White sand beaches in Japan: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ippei-janine/sets/72157600321338295/ There are also black sand beaches in volcanic countries such as Hawaii and Iceland.
It depends on the soil. There is red clay soil, brown sandy soil, and dark brown/black earthy soil. There are white sand beaches, black sand beaches and there are even a few beaches with green sand.
120
yes it comes from Stockton beach
Some beaches with black sand may be due to 'stamp sand', leftover material from copper ore crushing processes near bodies of water.
Iron-sand
it can be carribean sand or black sand from Hawaii or it can be seven mile sand what is a yellow color
Volcanic beaches are black because the sediments on the beach come from volcanoes. In other words, if a beach is black, that means that there was or is volcanic activity in the area.
MOST sand consists of broken down rock (silica dioxide). However, on islands, such as Hawaii, most sand is broken down coral (calcium carbonate). This is why most beaches in Hawaii are tan colored, and not white.