Title: Chapter 4 Volcanism and Extrusive Rocks
1Chapter 4Volcanism and Extrusive Rocks
GEOL 101 Introductory Geology
2Nature of Volcanic Eruptions
- Viscosity of magma controls the nature of a
volcanic eruption - Factors controlling viscosity
- Composition of the magma
- Temperature of the magma
- Dissolved gases in the magma
- Explosiveness violence of a volcanic eruption
3Nature of Volcanic Eruptions
- Viscosity measure of a materials resistance to
flow (e.g., higher viscosity materials flow with
great difficulty) - Factors affecting viscosity
- Temperature - hotter magmas are less viscous
- Composition
- higher silica (SiO2) content higher viscosity
(e.g., felsic lava, rhyolite) - lower silica content lower viscosity, fluid
behavior (e.g., mafic lava, basalt)
4Nature of Volcanic Eruptions
- Factors affecting viscosity (continued)
- Dissolved Gases
- Gas content affects magma mobility
- Magma gases expand nears the Earths surface due
to decreasing pressure - The violence of an eruption is related to how
easily gases escape from magma
5Nature of Volcanic Eruptions
- Summary
- Fluid lavas (basaltic) generally produce quiet
eruptions - Hawaiian Islands
- Highly viscous lavas (rhyolite or andesite)
produce more explosive eruptions - Mount Saint Helens
6Nature of Volcanic Eruptions
Magma Compositions
Bomb is approximately 10 cm long
7Materials extruded volcano
- Lava Flows
- Basaltic lavas are much more fluid
- Types of basaltic flows
- Pahoehoe lava (twisted or ropey texture)
- aa lava (rough, jagged blocky texture)
- Dissolved Gases
- One to six percent of a magma by weight
- Mainly water vapor and carbon dioxide
8Pahoehoe lava flow
9Typical aa flow
10Materials extruded from volcano
- Pyroclastic materials Fire fragments
- Ash and dust - fine, glassy fragments
- Pumice - porous rock from frothy lava
- Lapilli - walnut-sized material
- Cinders - pea-sized material
- Particles larger than lapilli
- Blocks - hardened or cooled lava
- Bombs - ejected as hot lava
11Volcanic bomb
Bomb is approximately 10 cm long
12Volcanoes
- General Features
- Opening at the summit of a volcano
- Crater steep-walled depression at the summit,
generally lt 1 km diameter - Caldera a summit depression typically lt 1 km
diameter, produced by collapse following a
massive eruption - Vent opening connected to the magma chamber via
a pipe
13Volcanoes
- Types of Volcanoes
- Shield volcano
- Cinder cone
- Composite cone (Stratovolcano)
- Comparison of Size
14 Volcano size comparison
15Volcano Types
- Shield volcano
- Broad, slightly domed-shaped
- Composed primarily of basaltic lava
- Generally cover large areas
- Produced by mild eruptions of large volumes of
lava - Example Mauna Loa on Hawaii
16Volcano Types
- Cinder cone
- Built from ejected lava (mainly cinder-sized)
fragments - Steep slope angle
- Rather small size
- Frequently occur in groups
17Sunset Crater Flagstaff, AZcinder cone
18Volcano Types
- Composite cone (Stratovolcano)
- Most are located adjacent to the Pacific Ocean,
Ring of Fire
(e.g., Fujiyama, Mt. St. Helens) - Large, classic-shaped volcano (1000s of feet
high several miles wide at base) - Mt. Rainer, WA - over 14,000 feet
- Composed of interbedded lava flows and layers of
pyroclastic debris
19Volcano Types
- Composite cones (continued)
- Most violent type of activity
(e.g., Mt. Vesuvius) - Often produce a nueé ardente
- Fiery pyroclastic flow made of hot gases infused
with ash and other debris - Move down the slopes of a volcano at speeds up to
200 km/hr - May produce a lahar volcanic mudflow
20Composite volcano
21 Mount Saint Helens typical composite
volcano
22Mount Saint Helens, WA
Before May 18, 1980
After May 18, 1980
23Mount Saint Helens
24Mount Saint Helens nueé ardente
25 Other volcanic landforms
- Calderas
- Steep-walled depressions at the summit
- Size generally lt1 km in diameter
- Pyroclastic flows
- Associated w/ felsic intermediate magma
- Consists of ash, pumice, and other fragmental
debris - Material is propelled from the vent at a high
speed
26 Formation of Calderas
27 Other volcanic landforms
- Fissure eruptions and lava plateaus
- Fluid basaltic lava extruded from crustal
fractures called fissures - Example Columbia River Plateau
- Lava Domes
- Bulbous mass of congealed lava
- Explosive eruptions of gas-rich magma
- Volcanic pipes and necks
- Pipes short conduits that connect a magma
chamber to the surface - necks resistant vents remaining after erosion
has removed the volcanic cone (e.g., Ship Rock,
New Mexico)
28 Columbia Lava Plateau
29 Lava dome on Mt. St. Helens
30 Plate tectonics Igneous activity
- Global distribution of igneous activity is not
random - Igneous activity along plate boundaries
- Spreading centers
- Subduction zones
- Intraplate (Hotspots)
- Most volcanoes are located within or near ocean
basins - Basaltic rocks (oceanic and continental
settings), granitic rocks (continental only)
31 Global Distribution of volcanoes
32 Spreading centers
- The greatest volume of volcanic rock is produced
along the oceanic ridge system - Mechanism of spreading
- Lithosphere pulls apart
- Less pressure on underlying rocks
- Results in partial melting of mantle
- Produces large amount of basaltic magma
33 Subduction zones
- Occur in conjunction with deep oceanic trenches
- Descending plate partially melts
- Magma slowly moves upward
- Rising magma can form either
- An island arc if in the ocean
- A volcanic arc if on a continental margin
- Associated with the Pacific Ocean Basin
- Ring of Fire
- Worlds most explosive volcanoes
34 Volcanoes at Pacific Northwest
35 Submarine Eruptions
Form pillow structure.