Title: Other volcanic features
1Other volcanic features
- Flood basalts
- Largest volcanic events in terms of volume
- Volatiles, viscosity are low, so not very
explosive - Cover large areas w/ thick layers of lava
- Lava domes
- Hardened dome/plug of magma cools quickly
- Can form in hours, continue for years, decades
2Flood Basalts
3Lava Domes
Lava Dome, Mt. St. Helens
4Volcanic Hazards
5Outline
- Types of volcanic hazards
6Volcano Classification
- Active currently erupting or has erupted in
historical time - Dormant presently inactive but may erupt again
(examples Cascades) - Extinct not active, not expected to be active
for long time in future
7Cumulative Deaths Due to Volcanic Hazards in past
2000 years
8Causes of Deaths
9How bad can it be?
- 1815 Indonesia 92,000 died
- 1822 Indonesia 5,500 killed
- 1826 Indonesia 3,000 killed
- 1883 Indonesia 36,417 killed
- 1902 Martinique 29,025 killed
- 1902 Guatemala 6,000 killed
- 1919 Indonesia 5,110 killed
- 1951 New Guinea 2,942 killed
- 1982 Mexico 1,700 killed
- 1985 Columbia 23,000 killed
10Pyroclastic Flow
- Most deadly of all hazards
- Superhot, fast moving cloud of volcanic gas,
steam, debris - 200-700 degrees C, 80 km/hr (hurricane speeds!)
11Generation of pyroclastic flow
- Eruption column collapse
- Dome collapse
- Directed blasts
12Pyroclastic flows
Mayon, Philippines, 1984
13Effects of Pyroclastic Flows
- Destroys nearly everything in path
- Structures
- Burial of sites
- Burn forests, crops, structures
- Melt snow to form lahars
14Building destruction
Remnant of building after eruption of El Chichon,
Mexico in 1982 Note reinforcement rods bent in
direction of flow
15Effects of pyroclastic flows
Mt. St. Helens - forest destruction
16Effects on people
- Physical impact
- Burns
- Inhaling superhot gases
- Usually quick death
17Examples
- Many examples of devastating pyroclastic flows
- Unzen, Japan
- Chichon, Mexico
- Mt. Pelee, Caribbean
18Mt. Pelee
- 1902-1903, 1929-1932 significant pyroclastic
flows - Many from directed blasts, deadliest in 1902
- Viscous magma filled crater
- May 1902, several pyroclastic flows, traveling
190 km/hr - Destroyed St. Pierre (30,000 people) and other
towns in area
19Mt. Pelee
Large area affected by 1902 pyroclastic flows
20Eruption Debris
- Includes cloud, bombs, ash fall
- Bombs kill small of people every year
- Clouds
- Planes fly into cloud - dangerous
- Over 25 years, 60 jets damaged
- Ash fall
- Bury cities
21Ash fall hazards
Roof collapse
Mid-Afternoon - daylight gone
Water systems can clog
22Cloud Hazard
Kamchatka eruption, seen by space shuttle
Ash from Mt. Spurr traveled around for days
(satellite image)
23Example - Mt. Vesuvius 79 AD
- Cause of volcano subduction
- Region near Pompeii also had earthquakes, but
city of 20,000 people not deterred to move - Significant volume of material erupted (4 km3) in
first wave - Pompeii buried by ash/pumice 3 m deep
- Later pyroclastic flows continued to bury city
24Vesuvius
Remains of Pompeii after 79 AD eruption
25Tsunami
- Wave caused by undersea vertical displacement
(like earthquakes) - Volcanic eruption can also cause tsunami
- Pyroclastic flow or lava dome avalanche
- Collapse of cone or crater
26Example - Krakatau 1883
- Stratovolcano between Java and Sumatra
- Subduction zone
- Collapse led to tsunami 35 m (115 ft)
- Death toll 36,000
- New cone appeared in 1927
27Collapse of Krakatau
Anak Krakatau
28Lahars
- Mudflow of volcanic debris, produced when
pyroclastic debris or lava mix with rain, snow,
ice, lakes - Can travel quickly (40 mph) and significant
distances (10s of miles)
29Dark pathways - lahars triggered by Mt. St.
Helens eruption, 1985
Cloud upriver lahar traveling down riverbed in
Guatemala
30Home destroyed from lahar - Mt. Unzen, Japan lava
dome collapse and later rains, 1993
31Example - Nevado del Ruiz 1985
- Colombian volcano, small glacier on top
- Small eruption caused melting, sending mud down
the mountain - Covered most of town of Armero with 26 ft thick
mud - Killed 22,000
32Nevado del Ruiz, 1985
River valley with lahar remains
Town of Armero
33Famine
- Indirect hazard
- Eruptions change climate
- Can harm plants, animals
34Iceland eruption, 1783
- Fissure eruption of basalt
- Released gas rich in SiO2 and fluorine
- Slowed grass growth and added significant amounts
of fluorine to grass - Killed significant population of livestock
- 20 of Iceland population died due to famine
35Tambora, 1815
- Indonesian volcano, most violent eruption in last
200 years - Significant Plinian eruption
- Next pyroclastic flows (12mi3 of material)
- Deaths in region 90,000 (10 during eruption,
90 later) - 1816 - year without summer
- Affected global climate
36Gas
- Gas can escape from basaltic magmas
- CO2 gas is common
- Depending on gas, can kill plants in region
- Can also be trapped in water
37Example - Lake Nyos, Cameroon
- Area of failed rifts with some remaining volcanic
activity - 1986 - gas burp from the lake
- Sent rivers of gas down into valleys 25 km (16
mi) - Effects - 1700 deaths, no animals alive
- Plants ok though
38Why?
- CO2 gas leaking out of basaltic magma
- Dissolved in bottom waters of lake (held down by
pressure) - Some event caused overturn
- Eruption, earthquake, landslide, temp change all
possible triggers - Gas release river 50 m thick
39Lake Nyos
40Lake Nyos
Efforts to pump water, gas out of lake
41Continued hazard?
- YES!
- Still some gas remaining
- Continues to build up
- Possible ways to pump gas out to reduce risk
42Lava Flows
- Not big hazards in terms of fatalities
- Moves too slow to kill people
- Can destroy towns, villages
43Kilauea, HI
- Few lives lost
- Mostly structural losses
441973 Flows in Iceland
- Lava flows threatened town, harbor
- Built diverters to control flow
- Sprayed water to harden flows, move to flow in
other direction away from harbor
45Man vs. volcano!
46Actually gained land and improved harbor
47Next Time
- U.S. volcanoes and related hazards