'A'a flows are typically several meters thick and covered in spiny rubble
splintered off from the flow itself. As the flow advances, this covering of
rubble falls off of the leading edge and forms a dangerous cascade of hot,
incandescent debris. Hiking over the rubbly surface of an 'a'a flow is a very
unpleasant experience. The ancient Hawaiians who traversed these flows may have
been very literal when naming them 'a'a.
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