Title: Chapter 3: Volcanoes
1Chapter 3 Volcanoes
2Chapter 3.1
- Key Concepts
- Where are Earths volcanoes found?
- How do hot spot volcanoes form?
3Definitions
- Volcano a weak spot in the Earths crust where
molten material (magma) comes to the surface - Magma a molten mixture of rock forming
substances, gases and water from the earths
mantle. - Lava when magma reaches the Earths surface.
4Volcanoes Plate Boundaries
- 600 active volcanoes on land, many more under the
sea. - Volcanoes occur in belts that extend across
continents and oceans. - Ring of Fire - major volcanic belt formed by the
many volcanoes that rim the Pacific Ocean.
5Volcanic belts form along the boundaries of
Earths plates
6- Volcanic belts form along the boundaries of the
Earths plates - Diverging (? ?)and converging (??) occur.
- Results in fractures in the Earths crust
- Magma reaches the surface.
7Most volcanoes occur at
- Divergent Boundaries
- Mid Ocean Ridge
- Convergent boundary
- Points of subduction
- ex. Mount Etna Eurasian and African plates
8Volcanoes on Divergent Boundaries
- Under ocean point of Mid ocean ridges occurring
( long underwater mountain ranges) - Many have rift valleys down the center
- Lava pours out of rift valley creates new
mountains. - Land - Great Rift Valley in East Africa
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10Volcanoes on Convergent Boundaries
- Volcanoes form when
- Two oceanic plates collide
- Oceanic and continental plates collide
- In both situations, oceanic plates sink beneath a
trench. - Rock above the plate melts to form magma.
- Erupts to the surface as lava
11Volcanoes on Convergent Boundaries
12Volcanoes on Convergent Boundaries
- Magma less dense than the surrounding rock
- Magma rises to the surface and breaks through the
ocean floor creating volcanoes. - String of islands formed Island arc
- Examples Japan, New Zealand, Indonesia, the
Philippines
13Hot Spot Volcanoes
- Hot Spot an area where material from deep
within the mantle rises and melts forming magma - Volcanoes form above a hot spot when magma erupts
through the crust and reaches the surface.
14Hot Spot Volcanoes
- Some hot spots lie in the middle of plates far
from plate boundaries. - Others occur on or near plate boundaries.
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15Hot Spot Volcanoes
- A hot spot in the ocean floor can gradually form
a series of volcanic mountains - Ex. The Hawaiian islands
16Hot Spot Volcanoes
- A hot spot can also form under continents
- Ex. Yellowstone National Park, WY
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183.2 PROPERTIES OF MAGMA
- Vocabulary
- Element-a substance that cannot be broken down
into other substances - Compound-a substance made of two or more elements
that have been chemically combined - Physical Property-a characteristic of a substance
that can be observed or measured without changing
the composition of a substance - Chemical Property-any property that produces a
change in the composition of matter.
19- Pahoehoe-fast moving, hot lava that has low
viscosity - aa-higher viscosity, slower moving, cooler lava
that Pahoehoe - Viscosity-the resistance of a liquid to flow
- Silicamajor ingredient in magma made of silicon
and oxygen.
20- Magma Composition
- Magma varies in composition and is classified
according to the amount of silica it contains. - The graphs show the average composition of the
two types of magma. Use the graphs to answer the
questions.
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22- What materials make up both types of magma?
- Silica, oxides, and other solids
- Which type of magma has more silica? About how
much silica does this type of magma contain?
Rhyolite, 70 - A third type of magma has a silica content that
is halfway between that of the other two types.
About how much silica does this type of magma
contain? 60 - What type of magma would have a higher viscosity?
Explain. The rhyolite forming would have higher
viscosity because it contains more silica
23Volcanic Eruptions 3.3
- Objectives
- Explain what happens when a volcano erupts.
- Describe 2 types of volcanic eruptions
- Identify stages of volcanic activity
- What comes out of volcanic explosions?
- Ash, lava, steam, rock, gases, dirt
24Volcanic Eruptions 3.3
- Magma forms in the asthenosphere
- Convection currents in the mantle bring magma
towards the surface - Magma tries to flow into any open crack
- When magma reaches a weak spot in the crust, a
volcano forms - Lava is magma that has reached the surface
25Magma Reaches Earths Surface
- Volcanoes are systems of passage ways through
which magma moves. - Inside a Volcano
- Magma collects below the volcano in the magma
chamber - Magma flows upward through a tube (pipe) that
connects the magma chamber to the surface.
26Magma Reaches Earths Surface
- Inside a Volcano
- Gas and magma leave through vents
- Central vent is the opening at the top
- Side vent anywhere along the side of the volcano
- Lava pours out of the vents and creates a lava
flow - A bowl shaped area called a crater may form
around the central vent
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28Magma Reaches Earths Surface
- A Volcanic Eruption
- Dissolved gases are trapped
- in magma under extreme
- pressure (CO2 in a soda bottle)
- as magma flows , pressure because there
is less rock on top of it. - the dissolved gases expand and form bubbles
- When a volcano erupts, the force of the expanding
gas forces magma up the pipe until it explodes
out the vent
29Content checkpoint think/pair sharetake two
minutes to answer these questions with a partner
nearby..
- What common everyday occurrence can we relate to
a volcanic eruption? - What happens to the pressure in the magma as it
rises toward the surface?
30Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions
- Volcanic eruptions can be quiet or explosive.
- Eruptions depend on the properties of magma
- Silica content
- Viscosity
31Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions
- Quiet Eruptions
- Magma has low silica content low viscosity
- Magma flows easier so gases bubble out gently
- Lava can flow many kilometers from the vent
- Produce both pahoehoe and aa lava
- Example Hawaiian Islands Mount Kilauea
32Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions
- Explosive Eruptions
- Magma has high silica content high viscosity
- Magma doesnt always flow out of vent and so it
builds up (like a cork in a bottle) - Trapped gases build up pressure until they
explode - Magma is pushed out of the vent with incredible
force
33Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions
- Explosive Eruptions
- Lava breaks into fragments that cool quickly and
harden into different sizes - Ash fine, dust sized particles of lava
- Cinders pebble sized particles
- Bombs baseball to car sized chunks of lava
- Pyroclastic flow when an explosive eruption
hurls out gases, ash, cinders and bombs. - Pumice forms when lava cools quick and traps air
bubbles inside - Obsidian forms when lava cools quick leaving the
surface smooth and glass-like
34Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions
- Volcano Hazards
- Quiet eruptions cause lava to flow far ---
burning and burying everything in its path - Explosive eruptions can bury entire towns in ash,
cause landslides, avalanches, cause damage from
gases and cinders/bombs.
35Content checkpoint think-pair-share take two
minutes to answer these questions with a partner
nearby.
- What is pyroclastic flow?
- How does volcanic ash cause damage?
- What is the main difference between a quiet
eruption and an explosive eruption?
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38Stages of Volcanic Activity
- Life Cycle of a Volcano
- Scientists use historical records and monitor
volcanoes to determine what stage of activity a
volcano is in - A volcano can be active, dormant or extinct
- An active volcano is erupting or showing signs of
near future eruptions - A dormant (sleeping) volcano can awaken in the
future and become active - An extinct (dead) volcano is unlikely to erupt
ever again
39Stages of Volcanic Activity
- Monitoring Volcanoes
- Geologists use tiltmeters to detect slight
changes in surface elevation cause by magma
moving underground - They monitor gases escaping from a volcano
- Increase in temperature might mean magma is
nearing the surface - The changes detected may give a short warning
time BUT - We cannot be certain the type of eruption or how
powerful it will be
40Think and Discuss.
- Which is more likely to be dangerous a volcano
that erupts frequently or a volcano that has been
inactive for a hundred years? WHY?
413.4 Volcanic Landforms
- Objectives
- List the landforms that lava and ash create
- Explain how magma that hardens beneath earths
crust creates landforms - Identify other distinct features that occur in
volcanic areas - Volcanic activity on and beneath the surface has
built up Earths land areas.
42Landforms from Lava and Ash
- Volcanic eruptions create landforms made of lava,
ash and other materials - Shield volcanoes
- Cinder cone volcanoes
- Composite volcanoes
- Lava plateaus
- Another landform results from the collapse of a
volcanic mountain - caldera
43- Shield volcanoes
- Gently sloping mountains
- Thin layers of low viscosity lava build up over
time - Ex) the Hawaiian Islands
- CSAV Hawaii Pele's Hair (Volcanic Glass) -
YouTube - Kilauea Lava Flows on May 6, 2012 - YouTube
44- Cinder cone volcanoes
- High viscosity lava produces ash, cinders and
bombs - Those materials build up around the vent in a
steep cone shaped hill/mountain. - Ex) Sunset Crater in Arizona
45- Composite Volcanoes
- Form when volcanoes alternate between quiet lava
flows and explosive eruptions of ash, cinders and
bombs - Tall, cone shaped mountain with alternating
layers of ash and lava - Ex) Mt St. Helens, Washington and Mt. Fuji, Japan
46- Composite Volcanoes
- Form when volcanoes alternate between quiet lava
flows and explosive eruptions of ash, cinders and
bombs - Tall, cone shaped mountain with alternating
layers of ash and lava - Ex) Mt St. Helens, Washington and Mt. Fuji, Japan
47- Lava Plateaus
- Low viscosity lava flows out of several long
cracks and travels far before cooling - After millions of years a high plateau forms
- Ex) Columbia Plateau in Washington, Oregon and
Idaho
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49- Calderas
- Huge hole left by the collapse of composite
volcanic mountains - Filled with fallen pieces of the volcano, ash and
lava - Enormous eruptions may empty the pipe and the
magma chamber - there is only hollow space left that cant
support the weight and it collapses on itself - Overtime water from rain and snow may fill the
caldera - Ex) Crater Lake, Oregon
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52- Soil from lava and ash
- People settle near volcanoes because of the rich,
fertile soil - At first, after volcanic eruptions the land is
empty and barren - Overtime the ash breaks down and provides
- Potassium
- Phosphorus
- Other substances that plants need
53Landforms from Magma
- Sometimes magma forces its way through cracks in
the crust but never reaches the surface - The magma cools and hardens within the rock
layers - Overtime ice, wind, or rain erode away the
surrounding rock and expose the hardened magma
54- Volcanic Necks
- Forms when magma hardens in the pipe
- Overtime the outer rock is weathered away
- Looks like a giant tooth
- Ex) Ship Rock, New Mexico
55- Dikes and Sills
- Dike when magma forces its way across multiple
rock layers and hardens - Sill when magma squeezes between horizontal
layers of rock and hardens - Ex) Palisades, NY NJ
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57- Batholiths
- Large masses of rock that are formed when a huge
mass of magma cools inside the Earths crust - The outer layers of rock erode away leaving the
hardened magma exposed - Ex) Sierra Nevada Batholith
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59- Dome Mountains
- Created by smaller bodies of magma
- The hardened magma uplifts the surrounding rock
and causes it to bend into a dome shape - Ex) Black Hills, South Dakota
60Geothermal Activity
- Geo Earth, therme heat
- Geothermal activity when magma a few km beneath
the surface heats underground water. - Ex) hot springs and geysers found near past and
present volcanic activity
61- Hot Springs
- Forms when underground water is heated by magma
or hot rock - The heated water rises and collects in pools
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63- Geysers
- Fountains of water and steam that erupt from the
ground - The heated water and steam build up pressure
until finally it erupts - Ex) Old Faithful, Yellowstone National Park
64- Geothermal Energy
- Heated water can provide an energy source
- Heated water can be used to power turbines and
create electricity