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Volcanoes

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Scientists usually consider a volcano active if it is ... fumaroles - vents from which volcanic gas escapes into ... fumaroles. a fumarole on Kilauea ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Volcanoes


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Volcanoes
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(No Transcript)
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volcano
  • A volcano is a vent at the Earth's surface
    through which magma (molten rock) and associated
    gases erupt, and also the cone built by effusive
    and explosive eruptions
  • The lifespan of a volcano can vary from months to
    several million years

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volcano
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volcano
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volcano
  • How they form
  • Divergent boundaries (sea floor spreading)

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volcano
  • Convergent boundaries

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volcano
  • Scientists usually consider a volcano active if
    it is currently erupting or showing signs of
    unrest
  • Many scientists also consider a volcano active if
    it has erupted in historic time
  • Recorded history reaches back more than 3,000
    years but in the Pacific Northwest of the United
    States, it reaches back less than 300 years, and
    in Hawaii, little more than 200 years.

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volcano
  • Dormant volcanoes are those that are not
    currently active (as defined above), but could
    become restless or erupt again
  • Extinct volcanoes are those that scientists
    consider unlikely to erupt again

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Types of volcanic cones or structures
  • caldera
  • cinder cone
  • hornito
  • maar
  • mud volcano
  • shield volcano
  • spatter cone
  • stratovolcano
  • volcanic dome

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Shield volcano
  • Volcanoes with broad, gentle slopes and built by
    the eruption of fluid basalt lava
  • The largest volcanoes on Earth are shield
    volcanoes
  • Basalt lava tends to build enormous, low-angle
    cones because it flows across the ground easily
    and can form lava tubes that enable lava to flow
    tens of kilometers from an erupting vent with
    very little cooling

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Shield volcano
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Stratovolcano
  • Sometimes called composite volcanoes
  • Steep, conical volcanoes built by the eruption of
    viscous lava flows, tephra, and pyroclastic flows
  • may erupt a variety of magma types, including
    basalt, andesite, dacite, and rhyolite. All but
    basalt commonly generate highly explosive
    eruptions
  • typically consists of many separate vents, some
    of which may have erupted cinder cones and domes
    on the volcano's flanks

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Stratovolcano
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Cinder cone
  • a steep, conical hill of volcanic fragments that
    accumulate around and downwind from a vent
  • range in size from tens to hundreds of meters
    tall
  • usually erupt lava flows, either through a breach
    on one side of the crater or from a vent located
    on a flank

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Cinder cone
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eruption types
  • Effusive eruption
  • An eruption dominated by the outpouring of lava
    onto the ground
  • aa
  • pahoehoe
  • obsidian
  • pillow basalt

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eruption types
  • Aa - (pronounced "ah-ah") is a Hawaiian term
    for lava flows that have a rough rubbly surface
    composed of broken lava blocks called clinkers

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eruption types
  • Pahoehoe - Hawaiian term for basaltic lava that
    has a smooth, hummocky, or ropy surface

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eruption types
  • Obsidian - dense volcanic glass, usually rhyolite
    in composition and typically black in color
  • often formed in rhyolite lava flows where the
    lava cools so fast that crystals do not have time
    to grow

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eruption types
  • Pillow lava - when basalts erupt underwater
    mounds of elongate lava "pillows" formed by
    repeated oozing and quenching of the hot basalt

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eruption types
  • Geyser - hot springs that episodically erupt
    fountains of scalding water and steam.
  • Such eruptions occur as a consequence of
    groundwater being heated to its boiling
    temperature in a confined space (for example, a
    fracture or conduit)

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eruption types
  • Phreatic eruptions - steam-driven explosions that
    occur when water beneath the ground or on the
    surface is heated by magma, lava, hot rocks, or
    new volcanic deposits (for example, tephra and
    pyroclastic-flow deposits).

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eruption types
  • Phreatic eruptions

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eruption types
  • Lava fountain - a jet of lava sprayed into the
    air by the rapid formation and expansion of gas
    bubbles in the molten rock
  • Lava fountains erupt from isolated vents, along
    fissures, within active lava lakes, and from a
    lava tube when water gains access to the tube in
    a confined space

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eruption types
  • Lava fountain

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eruption types
  • Lava lakes - large volumes of molten lava,
    usually basaltic, contained in a vent, crater, or
    broad depression
  • can form (1) from one or more vents in a crater
    that erupts enough lava to partially fill the
    crater (2) when lava pours into a crater or
    broad depression and partially fills the crater
    and (3) atop a new vent that erupts lava
    continuously for a period of several weeks or
    more and slowly builds a crater higher and higher
    above the surrounding ground.

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eruption types
  • Lava lakes

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eruption types
  • pyroclastic flow - a ground-hugging avalanche of
    hot ash, pumice, rock fragments, and volcanic gas
    that rushes down the side of a volcano as fast as
    100 km/hour or more
  • temperature within a pyroclastic flow may be
    greater than 500 C, sufficient to burn and
    carbonize wood
  • the ash, pumice, and rock fragments may deform
    (flatten) and weld together because of the
    intense heat and the weight of the overlying
    material.

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eruption types
  • pyroclastic flow

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eruption types
  • Strombolian - characterized by the intermittent
    explosion or fountaining of basaltic lava from a
    single vent or crater
  • caused by the release of volcanic gases, and they
    typically occur every few minutes or so,
    sometimes rhythmically and sometimes irregularly
  • lava fragments generally consist of partially
    molten volcanic bombs that become rounded as they
    fly through the air.

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eruption types
  • Strombolian

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eruption types
  • vulcanian - explosive eruption that ejects new
    lava fragments that do not take on a rounded
    shape during their flight through the air
  • moderate-sized explosive eruptions commonly eject
    a large proportion of volcanic ash and also
    breadcrust bombs and blocks

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eruption types
  • vulcanian

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eruption types
  • Plinian - large explosive events that form
    enormous dark columns of tephra and gas high into
    the stratosphere
  • Such eruptions are named for Pliny the Younger,
    who carefully described the disastrous eruption
    of Vesuvius in 79 A.D - 2,000 were killed

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eruption types
  • Plinian

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volcano
  • fissure - a fracture or crack in rock along which
    there is a distinct separation an elongate
    fracture or crack at the surface from which lava
    erupts

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volcano
  • caldera - a large, usually circular depression at
    the summit of a volcano formed when magma is
    withdrawn or erupted from a shallow underground
    magma reservoir

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volcano
  • Vent - openings in the Earth's crust from which
    molten rock and volcanic gases escape onto the
    ground or into the atmosphere
  • consist of a single circular-shaped structure, a
    large elongate fissure and fracture, or a tiny
    ground crack

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volcano
  • vent

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volcano
  • Volcanic ash - consists of rock, mineral, and
    volcanic glass fragments smaller than 2 mm

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volcano
  • fumaroles - vents from which volcanic gas escapes
    into the atmosphere
  • may occur along tiny cracks or long fissures
  • may persist for decades or centuries if they are
    above a persistent heat source or disappear
    within weeks to months if they occur atop a fresh
    volcanic deposit that quickly cools

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volcano
  • fumaroles

a fumarole on Kilauea Volcano
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volcano
  • Basalt - hard, black volcanic rock with less than
    about 52 weight percent silica (SiO2)
  • it has a low viscosity (resistance to flow)
  • basaltic lava can flow quickly and easily move

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volcano
  • Magma - molten or partially molten rock beneath
    the Earth's surface
  • When magma erupts onto the surface, it is called
    lava
  • Magma typically consists of (1) a liquid portion
    (often referred to as the melt) (2) a solid
    portion made of minerals that crystallized
    directly from the melt (3) solid rocks
    incorporated into the magma from along the
    conduit or reservoir, called xenoliths or
    inclusions and (4) dissolved gases.

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volcano
  • Magma types
  • Dacite - light gray, but can be dark gray to
    black. Dacite lava consists of about 63 to 68
    percent silica (SiO2)
  • erupts at temperatures between 800 and 1000C.
  • Rhyolite - light-colored rock with silica (SiO2)
    content greater than about 68 weight percent
  • erupted at temperatures of 700 to 850 C
  • Andesite - gray to black volcanic rock with
    between about 52 and 63 weight percent silica
    (SiO2)
  • erupt at temperatures between 900 and 1100 C.

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volcano
  • Silica A chemical combination of silicon and
    oxygen (SiO2).

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  • Dacite
  • Andesite
  • Rhyolite

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volcano
  • Magma

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volcano
  • Tephra - a general term for fragments of volcanic
    rock and lava regardless of size that are blasted
    into the air by explosions or carried upward by
    hot gases in eruption columns or lava fountains
  • includes large dense blocks and bombs, and small
    light rock debris such as scoria, pumice,
    reticulite, and ash.

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volcano
  • Tephra
  • Tephra erupted by Mount St. Helens on 18 May 1980
    ranging in size from ash (left 2 piles) to
    lapilli (right 2 piles).

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volcano
  • bombs - lava fragments that were ejected while
    viscous (partially molten) and larger than 64 mm
    in diameter
  • Many acquire rounded aerodynamic shapes during
    their travel through the air.
  • Volcanic bombs include breadcrust bombs, ribbon
    bombs, spindle bombs (with twisted ends),
    spheroidal bombs, and "cow-dung" bombs

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volcano
  • block - solid rock fragment greater than 64 mm in
    diameter that was ejected from a volcano during
    an explosive eruption
  • commonly consist of solidified pieces of old lava
    flows that were part of a volcano's cone

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volcano
  • block

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volcano
  • Bombs
  • These basaltic lava bombs were erupted by Mauna
    Kea Volcano, Hawaii.
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