volcanoes chapter 6. eruptions volcano – (#34) opening in earth’s surface which allows gas &...

Post on 04-Jan-2016

223 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Volcanoes Chapter 6

Eruptions

• Volcano – (#34) opening in Earth’s surface which allows gas & magma to escape– Magma: (#35) molten rock underground– Lava: (#36) molten rock at Earth’s surface

• Two types– Non-explosive

• calm flows of lava such as Mt. Kiluea or sea floor spreading• most common• happen over long periods, all the time

– Explosive• clouds of hot ash, debris, and gas shoot out• rarer• sudden and destructive

Volcano Parts

Magma

• Explosiveness of eruption depends on:– water– silica in magma– gases

• Water and CO2 remain dissolved in magma until pressure released– Like a can of soda exploding when top opened

• Magma with high silica content very stiff and can plug vent opening– Builds pressure by preventing water and other gases

from escaping

Eruption Materials

• Lava (non explosive) – liquid rock– Aa or blocky: high viscosity, stiff, slow moving, brittle, jagged or blocks– Pahoehoe or pillow lava: low viscosity, more fluid, faster moving,

smooth

More Eruption Materials

• Pyroclastic material (explosive) – magma hardens in the air or shatters existing rock– volcanic bombs– volcanic blocks– lapilli– volcanic ash

• Pyroclastic flows (#37)– hot ash, dust, and

gases ejected and flow rapidly downhill

Effects

• Deaths by blast or pyroclastic flows• Ecologically damage• Climate change

– ash in upper atmosphere– blocks sunlight– Mt. Tambora in Indonesia in 1815

• 12,000 direct deaths• 80,000 deaths from hunger and disease• Food shortages in Europe and N. America next year due to

reduced sunlight and temperature• Global temperatures dropped .5 degrees C

Types• Shield

– (#39) Repeated lava flows build up over time from non-explosive eruptions

– Gently sloping over wide area– Mauna Kea in Hawaii

• Cinder cone– (#40) Pyroclastic material builds up from moderately explosive eruptions– Steep slopes of cinder cones– Not very stable, sometimes on sides of other volcanoes– Paricutin in Mexico

• Composite (aka stratovolcano)– Most common type– (#41) Alternating flows of lava and pyroclastic material build up– Broad bases that get steeper towards top– Mt Fuji in Japan, Mt Hood, Mt Ranier, Mt St Helens, Mt Shasta

Other Volcanic Landforms

• Craters

• Calderas (#38)

• Lava plateaus

Locations

• Divergent boundary – mid ocean ridges– most volcanic activity on Earth

• Convergent boundary – subduction zones– descending oceanic crust– melting rock less dense and rises up– 80% of all land volcanoes at convergent

• Hot spots– mantle plumes far from plate boundaries– Hawaiian islands– Yellowstone

top related