Title: Volcanoes
1Volcanism
2Volcanism
- The process whereby magma and associated gas
rises through the crust and are extruded onto the
surface or into the atmosphere. - Major node in the rock cycle.
- Constructive geologic process.
- Dynamic recycling process.
- Destructive geologic hazard.
3Fig. 1-12, p. 20
4Volcanism
- About 550 volcanoes are active (erupted during
historic time). A larger number are dormant (not
active recently, but may erupt again) or are
extinct (permanently inactive). - The mid-ocean ridge system is a vast chain of
underwater volcanic centers that are nearly
constantly active - Other bodies in the solar system are volcanically
active (Triton and Io)
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7Products of Volcanism
- Volcanic Gas
- Lava flows
- Pahoehoe
- Aa
- Lava lakes fountains
- Lava channels tubes
- Columnar joints
- Pillows
- Pyroclastics
- Ash
- Lapilli
- Volcanic bombs blocks
- Lahars, mudflows, etc.
- Nuee ardente
- Tuff
- Constructional features (volcanoes)
8Volcanic Gas
- Magma (and lava) has dissolved gas, like a soda.
And like a soda, if you decrease the pressure (by
opening it) the gas wants to escape - From last time, recall that hot, mafic lavas (low
viscosity) release gas easily. Cooler, felsic
lavas (higher viscosity) do not allow gas to
escape easily. Danger of explosive release!!
9Fig. 5-2, p. 116
10Fig. 4-8h, p. 96
11Volcanic Gas
- Small amount of gas (few wt. ) dissolved.
- 50-80 of the total gas is water vapor (H2O).
- Other important gases
- Carbon dioxide (CO2)
- Nitrogen (N2)
- Sulfur (SO2, H2S)
- Carbon monoxide (CO)
- Hydrogen (H2)
- Chlorine (Cl2)
12Volcanic Gas
- Important effects of gas content
- Explosive hazard of eruptions (viscosity of
lava) - Toxicity (SO2, CO2)
- Global climate (volcanic winter, volcanic
greenhouse, mass extinctions)
13Lava Flows
- Least dangerous extrusive phenomenon.
- Relatively slow moving.
- Predictable flow.
14Figure 1b, p. 118
15Pahoehoe Lava
16Fig. 5-4a, p. 119
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19Aa Lava
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22Scoria surface on an aa flow
23Lava Flows
- What determines if a mafic lava erupts as aa or
pahoehoe? - Viscosity
- Strain rate (how fast force is applied)
- Temperature
- Gas content
- If lava slows, cools, and stops as viscosity
increases ? stays pahoehoe. - If lava forced to keep flowing when viscosity
increases ? transition to aa.
24Fig. 5-4b, p. 119
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26Lava Channels
- Narrow, curved or straight open pathways through
which lava moves on the surface of a volcano. - Some of the lava congeals and cools along the
banks to form natural levees that may eventually
enable the lava channel to build a few meters
above the surrounding ground.
27Lava Tubes
- Underground lava conduits
- Form by the crusting over of lava channels and
flows. If supply of lava stops, lava in the tube
system drains downslope leaving empty tubes. - Commonly exhibit "high-lava" marks, flat floors,
and lava stalactites that hang from the roof.
28Fig. 5-3a, p. 117
29Fig. 5-3b, p. 117
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31Pressure Ridges
- As surface of a flow solidifies, it protects
the lava in the channel, allowing it to continue
to flow. - The crust becomes buckled and cracked due to the
flow, and develops an up-warped and fractured
ridge
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33Fig. 5-5a, p. 119
34Fig. 5-5b, p. 119
35Spatter Cones
- Very fluid fragments of molten lava ejected from
a vent that flatten and congeal on the ground. - Spatter will build walls of solidified lava
around a single vent to form a circular-shaped
spatter cone or along both sides of a fissure to
build a spatter rampart.
36Spatter Cones
37Spatter Cone line
38Lava Fountain
- Jet of lava sprayed 10 to 500 m into the air by
the rapid formation and expansion of gas bubbles.
39Lava Lakes
- Large volumes of molten lava, usually basaltic,
contained in a vent, crater, or broad depression.
- Active lava lakes have a partially solidified
shiny gray crust (5-30 cm thick a few minutes or
hours old) formed by lava constantly cooled by
the atmosphere. - Crust continually circulates, breaks, and sinks
into the moving molten lava below. The pattern of
movement looks like plate tectonics!
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42Pillow Lava
- Mounds of elongate lava "pillows" formed by
repeated oozing and quenching of the hot basalt. - First, a flexible glassy crust forms around the
newly extruded lava, forming an expanded pillow.
Next, pressure builds until the crust breaks and
new basalt extrudes like toothpaste, forming
another pillow.
43Fig. 5-7a, p. 120
44Fig. 5-7b, p. 120
45Columnar Joints
- Most materials contract as they cool. Lava does
this. - As lava coolss and contracts, forces cause it to
fracture, forming joints. - Cracks form a hexagonal pattern (due to geometry
of most efficient cooling. - Cracks extend down through the flow forming
columns
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47Fig. 5-6a, p. 120
48Fig. 5-6b, p. 120
49Tephra
- General term for fragments of volcanic rock and
lav, regardless of size, that are blasted into
the air by eruptions. - Fallen tephra size gets smaller with distance
from volcano. thickness of the resulting deposit
also becomes thinner with distance from source. - Small tephra stays aloft in the eruption cloud
for longer periods of time, which allows wind to
blow tiny particles farther from an erupting
volcano.
50Fig. 5-8, p. 121
51Ash
- Rock, mineral, and volcanic glass fragments
smaller than 2 mm (0.1 inch) in diameter. - Ash is extremely abrasive, similar to finely
crushed window glass, mildly corrosive, and
electrically conductive, especially when wet. - Volcanic ash is created during explosive
eruptions by the shattering of solid rocks and
violent separation of magma (molten rock) into
tiny pieces.
52Lapilli
- Rock fragments between 2 and 64 mm in diameter
(little stones) that were ejected from a
volcano during an explosive eruption.
53Volcanic Bombs Blocks
- Bombs are lava fragments (gt64 mm diameter) that
were ejected while viscous (partially molten).
Many acquire rounded aerodynamic shapes during
their travel through the air. - Blocks are solid rock fragments (gt 64 mm in
diameter) that were ejected from a volcano during
an explosive eruption. Blocks commonly consist of
solidified pieces of old lava flows that were
part of a volcano's cone.
54Scoria
- Vesicular (bubbly) glassy lava rock of basaltic
to andesitic composition. - The bubbly nature of scoria is due to the escape
of volcanic gases during eruption. - Like pumice, but denser.
55Fig. 4-16d, p. 101
56Pumice
- Light, porous volcanic rock that forms during
explosive eruptions. - Resembles a sponge because it consists of a
network of gas bubbles frozen amidst fragile
volcanic glass. All types of magma (basalt,
andesite, dacite, and rhyolite) will form pumice.
- During an explosive eruption, volcanic gases
dissolved in the liquid portion of magma expand
rapidly to create a foam or froth (glass).
57Fig. 4-16c, p. 101
58Fig. 4-16b, p. 101
59Reticulite
- Basaltic pumice in which nearly all cell walls of
gas bubbles have burst, leaving a honeycomb-like
structure. - Does not float in water because of the open
network of bubbles.
60Peles Tears and Peles Hair
- Pele's tears small bits of molten lava formed
into spheres or tear drops in lava fountains. - Peles hair thin strands of volcanic glass
drawn out from molten lava in lava fountains. A
single strand, with a diameter of less than 0.5
mm, may be as long as 2 m. Wind can blow the
glass threads several tens of kilometers from a
vent.
61Types of Volcanic Deposits
- Airfall tephra can be distributed by fall
through the atmosphere. Usually finer particles
like ash. Airfall tephra of basaltic eruptions
are much less voluminous than those of
intermediate to rhyolitic eruptions due to the
less explosive style of basaltic volcanic
activity. Deposits typically well sorted. - Pyroclastic flow and surge movement of large
volumes of material with the general behavior of
lava flows. They act as heavy fluids controlled
in their movement by gravity and the topography
of the underlying land surface. Deposits can be
well sorted or unsorted.
62Nuee Ardente
- Fiery Cloud. Hot ash flow. Pyroclastic flow.
- Mobile, dense cloud of hot (1000 C) pyroclastic
material and gases. Travel very rapidly (100
km/hr) and go long distances. - Gas expands as lava rises.
- Lava breaks up into fragments supported by
escaping gas. - Cloud flows downhill.
- Very destructive volcanic hazard!
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64Fig. 5-12b, p. 127
65Fig. 5-12a, p. 127
66Fig. 5-1a, p. 114
67Fig. 5-CO, p. 112
68Fig. 5-1b, p. 114
69Fig. 5-1c, p. 114
70Tuff
- A volcanic (extrusive) igneous rock that forms
when ash deposits are consolidated. Can be
air-fall or flow deposit.
71Fig. 4-16a, p. 101
72Lahars and Mudflows
- Indonesian word for a rapidly flowing mix of rock
debris water that originates on the slopes of a
volcano. - Mudflows (lots of water) or debris flows (less
water). - Hot or cold.
- Form by the rapid melting of snow and ice by
pyroclastic flows, intense rainfall on loose
volcanic rock deposits, breakout of a lake dammed
by volcanic deposits, and as a consequence of
debris avalanches. - Very destructive volcanic hazard!
73Fig. 5-11a, p. 126
74Fig. 5-11b, p. 126
75Volcanic Breccia
- Volcaniclastic (extrusive igneous/sedimentary)
rocks composed predominantly of angular volcanic
particles greater than 2 mm in size. Usually
debris flow/mudflow/lahar deposit or coarse
(near) part of tuff airfall/flow deposit or aa.
76Volcanoes
- Conical mountains formed around a vent where
lava, gas, and pyroclastics are erupted to the
surface. - Main crater (circular depression) at the summit
fed by a volcanic pipe. Subordinate vents on the
volcano flanks may also extrude material
(parasitic cones).
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78Kinds of Volcanoes
- Shield Volcano
- Cinder Cone
- Composite Volcano
- Lava Dome
79Shield Volcanoes
- Resemble an upside-down shield with low, rounded
profiles and gentle slopes (2-10 degrees max). - Built of thin, low-viscosity mafic flows (99).
- Massive constructional features. Example Mauna
Loa (Hawaii) 100 km across 9.5 km tall 50,000
km3 - Hawaiian-style eruptions.
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82Olympus Mons, Mars
83Cinder Cones
- Volcanic peak comosed of pyroclastic materials
resembling cinders (scoria, pumice, lapilli, and
ash). - Form when pyroclastic material is ejected and
falls close to the vent, piling up into a
steep-sided cone. - Up to 400 m high, often with a prominent crater.
- Often form in the caldera of a larger volcano.
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86Fig. 5-10, p. 125
87Figure 1, p. 126
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89Composite Volcanoes
- Stratovolcanoes. Built of both lava flows and
pyroclastics in layers. Usually andesitic
composition material. Large, high mountains with
concave profiles (steep summit and shallow
flanks). - Erupt explosively (especially in Plinean and
Pelean events). Lahar and nuee ardente
pyroclastic flows are real hazards. Airfall
deposits often voluminous. - Typical of subduction-zone volcanic arcs.
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92Mount Pinatubo, Phillipines
93Figure 1a, p. 118
94Mount Saint Helens, Washington State
95Lava Dome
- Characteristic of viscous (e.g. cool felsic)
magmas. - Bulbous, steep-sided constructs, often in the
craters of larger composite volcanoes. - Grow slowly, often in pulses. Tend to collapse
to create ash flows, nuee ardents, and other
pyroclastic debris flows.
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98Calderas
- Characterize large volcanic centers like those
responsible for ignimbrites and supervolcano
eruptions. Exceed 1 km in diameter with steep
sides. - Examples Yellowstone Long Valley, CA Mount
Mazama, Oregon
99Fig. 5-9, p. 124
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104Table 5-1, p. 115
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106Ignimbrite Eruptions (Supervolcanoes)
- Exceedingly large, caldera forming eruptions,
typically associated with andesitic to rhyolitic
magmas. - Caldera forming (no volcanic mountain) events
where very large volumes (1000 km3 ) of material
is ejected into the atmosphere. Airfall on a
continental scale as well as significant local
pyroclastic (tuff, welded tuff) flows. - Explosive force of thousands of nuclear weapons
(Yellowstone was about 2500 times more powerful
than Mt. St. Helens). - Examples Yellowstone Long Valley, CA
- Planetary-scale geologic hazard
107Eruptions every 600,000 years since 2.1 Ma
Last one 640,000 years ago!
Produced 85 x 45 km caldera. 3000 square miles
of pyroclastic flows. Sent airfall across most
of the continent.
Whens the next one?
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109Fig. 4-16a, p. 101
110Welded Tuff
- A volcanic (extrusive) igneous rock that forms
when still-warm tephra (tuff) accumulates.
Particles are hot and soft, and weld together
under the weight of overlying deposits, forming a
hard rock.
111Fissure Eruptions (Flood Basalts)
- Basaltic magma in huge volumes erupted along
fissures. Dozens to hundreds of lava flows pile
on top of one another. - Fluid magma ? no volcanic mountain little
pyroclastics. - Largest volcanic eruptions on Earth 2000 km3
of material in single flow (few days?). Compare
with Kilauea (Hawaii) with 1.5 km3 in 16 years!
Also release tremendous volumes of gas ? may play
role in mass extinctions (the timing may be
right)? - Thought to arise due to mantle plumes impinging
on the lithosphere - Planetary-scale geologic hazard
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113Flood Basalt Provinces
- Columbia River basalt plateau erupted 17 Ma to 5
Ma. - 164,000 km2 area to 1 km thickness.
- Deccan traps and Siberian traps are order of
magnitude larger
114Flood Basalt Provinces
- FLOOD BASALT PROVINCE SIZES
Province
Age (Ma) Area (km2 est.)
-------------------------------------------------
---------------------------- Siberian
2503 2,000,000
Paraña 1305
2,000,000 Deccan
662 1,500,000
Columbia River 171
200,000 Laki, Iceland 1783
A.D. 565 Northern
CAMP 2011
4,200,000 Southern CAMP 1993
5,900,000 - Total CAMP 1993
10,100,000 -----------------------------------
-------------------------------------------
Sources Hooper, 1988, The Columbia River
Basalt, in Macdougall, ed., Continental Flood
Basalts Kluwer, p. 1-33. Rampino Stothers,
1988, Flood basalt volcanism during the past
250 million years Science, v. 241, p. 663-668.
Thorarinsson, S., 1969, The Lakagigar eruption
of 1783 Bull. Volcanology, v. 33, p.
910-929. McHone, J.G., Puffer, J.H., 1999 (?).
Flood basalt provinces of the Pangaean
Atlantic rift Regional extent and environmental
significance. In Olsen, P.E., LeTourneau,
P.M., (Editors), Aspects of Triassic-Jurassic
Rift Basin Geoscience Columbia Univ. Press,
New York, in press
115Fig. 5-13a, p. 129
116Fig. 5-13c, p. 129
117Fig. 5-15, p. 131
118Mid-ocean Ridge Volcanism
119Hawaiian/Icelandic Eruptions
- Magma fluid, basaltic.
- Explosive activity Weak ejection of very fluid
blebs long-lived lava fountaining and lakes. - Effusive activity Thin, often extensive
long-lived flows of fluid lava. - Dominant ejecta Cow-dung bombs and spatter very
little ash (pyroclastics). - Vent structures Spatter cones and ramparts very
broad flat lava cones and shields. - Examples Hawaiian islands Iceland.
120Strombilian Eruptions
- Magma moderately fluid, basaltic.
- Explosive activity Weak to violent fountaining
and explosion of pasty blebs during intermittent
(rhythmic or irregular with a period of minutes
or hours) release of volcanic gases. - Effusive activity Occasionaly, thick, not
extensive flows of moderately-fluid lava. Long
lived flows (months to years). - Dominant ejecta Elliptical bombs cinder small
to large amounts of glassy ash. - Vent structures Cinder cones
- Examples Stromboli and Etna, Sicily.
121Vulcanian Eruptions
- Magma viscous and gas-rich basaltic to
rhyolitic. - Explosive activity moderate to violent ejection
of solid or very viscous hot fragments of gas-
and water-rich lava. - Effusive activity Flows commonly absent, but
when present they are thick, and stubby ash
flows, etc. are rare. Well-bedded, widely
distributed airfall is the common pyroclastic
material. - Dominant ejecta Large, dark mushroom cloud of
glassy ash glassy to lithic blocks pumice
breadcrust bombs. - Vent structures Ash cones block cones block
and ash cones. - Examples Aleutian Islands, Alaska.
122Pelean Eruptions
- Magma viscous, andesitic to rhyolitic.
- Explosive activity moderate to violent ejection
of solid or very viscous hot fragments of
effervescing lava common glowing avalanches (hot
ash flows and nuee ardents). - Effusive activity domes and/or very short, thick
flows may occur. - Dominant ejecta Glassy to lithic blocks, pumic,
and ash. Not much airfall. - Vent structures Ash and pumice cones (unstable)
steep domes and spines. - Examples Mt. Pelee, Martinique
123Plinian Eruptions
- Mamga viscous, felsic but becoming more mafic
with time. - Explosive activity voluminous, gas-rich
eruptions with catastrophic ejection of large
volumes of ash and accompanying caldera collapse.
Mega-tonnes of energy. - Effusive activity small to very voluminous (up
to 1,000 km3) sheets of widely-dispersed air-fall
pyroclastics very high (11 km) eruption
columns no lava, but pyroclastic flows are
common. - Dominant ejecta glassy ash and pumice
well-sorted and no welding. - Vent structures Widespread beds of pumice,
lapilli, and ash generally no cone building. - Examples Vesuvius, Italy Mt. Saint Helens, WA
Pinatubo, Phillipines
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125What controls explosiveness?
- Gas content (H2O, CO2, N2, SO2, H2S)
- Viscosity
- Temperature
- SiO2 content
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128St Helens Before
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132Surtseyan (Phreatic) Eruptions
- Magma viscous, basaltic (rarely andesitic).
- Explosive activity violent, continuous or
rhythmic explosions due to magma contacting
ground- or shallow surface-water ejection of
solid, warm, highly-fragmented (thermally
shocked) piecies of magma. - Effusive activity short, locally pillowed, rare
lava flows. - Dominant ejecta lithic blocks and ash forming
pyroclastic cones (tuff rings) of quenched magma
no spatter, fusiform bombs or lapilli. - Vent structures tuff rings.
- ExamplesSurtsey, Iceland.
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134Table 5-1, p. 115
135Fig. 5-14, p. 130
136Fig. 5-16a, p. 132
137Fig. 5-16b, p. 132
138Fig. 5-16c, p. 132
139Igneous Activity and Plate Tectonics
- Two questions
- 1. What are zones of igneous activity on earth
concentrated in belts. - 2. Why are magmas in ocean basins different than
those in the continents?
140Igneous Activity and Plate Tectonics
- Most volcanic activity occurs where plates
diverge and converge
141Igneous Activity and Plate Tectonics
- Divergent Margin Volcanism
- Convergent Margin Volcanism
- Hot Spot Volcanism
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143Igneous Activity and Plate Tectonics
- Gabbro basalt at divergent margins e.g. oceanic
spreading ridges and rifts. Produced by
upwelling, hot ultramafic mantle. It melts as it
is decompressed. 1st partial melt fraction
richer in Si ? basalt.
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145Igneous Activity and Plate Tectonics
- Granite rhyolite in continental interiors
continent-continent collision zones. - Diorite andesite in island arcs subduction
zones - Partial melt from subducted slabs and the bottom
of the crust that is then changed
146Fig. 5-17, p. 133
147Igneous Activity and Plate Tectonics
- But there are hot spots within plates, too!
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