Title: Magma generation
1Magma generation Plate Boundaries
2(No Transcript)
3What explains the location of 95 of the worlds
volcanoes?
4Volcanism
- Magma Liquid rock underground
- Lava Liquid rock on the surface of the Earth
- Vent Opening in a volcano where lava erupts
- Magma chamber Large store of magma
5If the asthenosphere is a solid how is magma
(liquid) generated at each place?
- Divergent plate boundary
- Convergent subduction plate boundary-
- Hot spots (not at plate boundary)-
6Hot Spots
- Hot spots in the mantle can cause melting of the
crust within a tectonic plate. - Hot spots remain stationary in the mantle, but
the lithospheric plate moves across it. - The volcano on the surface is eventually carried
away from the hot spot and becomes inactive. - A new volcano then forms where new crust has
moved over the hot spot.
7Mafic Hawaiian Islands and Emperor Seamounts
- Hotspot under moving oceanic crust
8Felsic Yellowstone Hot Spot
9Magma types
10Magma Types
11Mafic Shield volcanoes
- On ocean floor or oceanic islands
- Made from mafic lava
- Because gases can easily escape from mafic lava,
eruptions are relatively quiet. - Form broad, gently sloping shield volcanoes
- Built from many lava flows
- Ex Mauna Loa
12Mafic Pahoehoe lava flow
13Mafic Aa Lava Flow
14Mafic Lava Tubes
15Mafic Pillow Lava
- Ocean floor near mid-ocean ridges
- pillow lava video
16Intermediate Composite Volcanoes /
Stratovolcanoes
- In a quiet eruption, lava flows build up cone
- In an explosive eruption, large amounts of
pyroclastic material are deposited on the cone - The resulting cone is formed of alternating
layers of hardened lava flows and pyroclastic
material - Largest explosions destroy part of volcano
- Often tall
- Moderately steep due to stickier lava and
pyroclastic material - Ex.-Mount St. Helens, Mt. Fuji, Mt. Hood, Mt.
Rainier
17Intermediate Mount St. Helens before 1980
eruption
18Intermediate Mt. St. Helens following the 1980
eruption
19Intermediate Mt. Rainier today
20Intermediate/Felsic Pyroclastic flows
- Pyroclastic material flows downhill after an
eruption - Common on stratovolcanoes
21Intermediate/Felsic Lahars
- Pyroclastic material mixes with water to form a
mudflow - Common on tall stratovolcanoes that have deep
snowpack or glaciers
22Lahar hazard in Seattle
23Cinder Cones
- Made from any magma type
- Caused by small explosive eruptions
- Made from solid fragments ejected from the
volcano - Very steep slopes
- Very small, only a few hundred meters high
24Size comparison of the three types of volcanoes
25Cinder cone with crater
26Intermediate/Felsic Calderas
- When the magma chamber below a volcano is
emptied, the ground collapses - This leaves a large basin-shaped depression
called a caldera
27Felsic Long Valley Caldera, Mammoth, CA
28Predicting Volcanic Eruptions
- Use seismographs to monitor small earthquakes
- Indicates growing pressure on the surrounding
rocks as magma works its way upward - Use surveying with lasers and GPS to detect a
slight bulging of the surface of a volcano - Changes in the gases given off by a volcano
- Knowledge of previous eruptions
29Igneous Intrusions
- Batholith largest, at least 100 km2, means deep
rock, form the cores of many major mountain
chains. - Sills sheet of magma flows between the layers of
rock and hardens parallel to the rock layers - Dikes magma goes through vertical fractures and
hardens, cut across rock layers
30- Igneous Extrusions - Igneous rock masses that
form on the surface - Volcanic necks - are formed when the vent of an
extinct volcano solidifies and the flanks are
eroded away - Lava Plateaus - develop from lava that flows out
of long cracks in the earths surface. The lava
then spreads over a vast area, filling in valleys
and covering hills.