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Volcanoes

Volcanoes. Earth’s Creators and Destroyers. Structure of the Earth. The earth is composed of layers: Inner Core – solid Outer Core – liquid Mantle – solid Upper Mantle – plastic Crust – solid. Diagram of Earth’s Layers. Tectonic Plates.

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Volcanoes

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  1. Volcanoes Earth’s Creators and Destroyers

  2. Structure of the Earth • The earth is composed of layers: • Inner Core – solid • Outer Core – liquid • Mantle – solid • Upper Mantle – plastic • Crust – solid

  3. Diagram of Earth’s Layers

  4. Tectonic Plates • The lithosphere is the Earth’s hard, outermost shell that is divided into a mosaic of 16 major slabs, or tectonic plates. • These plates float on the upper mantle. • As the plates move about they spread apart, collide, or slide past each other

  5. Why Plates Move: Convection Cells

  6. Earth’s Tectonic Plates

  7. Where Volcanoes Occur • Volcanoes occur most frequently at plate boundaries. • Some volcanoes, like those that form the Hawaiian Islands, occur in the interior of plates at areas called hot spots. • The greatest number of volcanoes occur on the ocean floor along spreading ridges. • Over 80% of those on land occur at edges of continents, or subduction zones, where one plate dives, or subducts, under another plate.

  8. Why Volcanoes Occur • Temperatures in the mantle are hot enough to melt rock into magma. • Less dense than the solid rock around it, magma rises and some of it collects in magma chambers. • As the magma rises, pressure decreases allowing trapped gasses to expand and propel the magma through openings in the Earth’s surface causing an eruption. • Erupted magma is called lava.

  9. How Volcanoes Erupt • Eruptions are described as explosive or effusive (loosely flowing). • How explosive an eruption is depends on the magma’s chemical composition and gas content, which affect the magma’s stickiness, or viscosity. • If magma is fluid, gases can escape rapidly and lava flows; if magma is viscous the gases can not escape and pressure builds inside the magma until the gases escape, sometimes violently.

  10. Magma vs. Lava • Magma is molten rock beneath the surface. • Lava is erupted magma. There are 2 types of lava: • A a (ah ah) is largely solidified rock that gets pushed forward. • Pahoe hoe (pah hoy hoy) is flowing “liquid” with a ropy, billowy surface.

  11. Lava – Pahoe hoe

  12. Lava - Aa

  13. Types of Lava Flows • Lava flows are superheated streams of molten rock that flow at 1 – 50 mph. • Pyroclastic flows are avalanches of hot ash, rock fragments, and gases that flow at speeds greater than 100 mph. • Landslides are avalanches of rock, snow and ice on slopes of volcanoes (loosened and tumbling due to seismic activity). • Lahars (mud flows) are a mixture of volcanic ash and water (like wet concrete)

  14. Volcano Terms • A vent is an opening through which eruptions take place. • A crater is a basin like depression over a vent, at the summit of a volcano • A caldera is a depression larger than the original crater (>1km. Diameter) that forms when the summit is blown off, or when the volcano collapses into the empty magma chamber. • Example: Crater Lake atop Mt. St. Helens.

  15. Types of Volcanoes • Repeated volcanic eruptions build volcanic mountains of three basic types, or shapes, depending on the composition of the materials deposited by the eruption. • Shield volcanoes • Stratovolcanoes • Cinder cones

  16. Shield Volcanoes • Shield volcanoes are broad gently sloping volcanic mountains slowly formed by layerover layer of solidified lava. • Shield volcanoes are formed by effusive eruptions of fluid lava. • These can become very large as the low viscosity lava spreads widely and thickly. • Examples: Kilauea, Hawaii and Mt. Etna, Italy

  17. Kilauea, HI

  18. Kilauea

  19. Mt. Etna, Italy

  20. Mt. Etna

  21. Mt. Etna

  22. Stratovolcanoes (Composite) • Stratovolcanoes are formed from both explosive and effusive eruptions. • Layers of tephra alternating with layers of viscous lava flows create steep-sided, often symetrical cones that can be very large. • Formed over long spans of time as periods of 100,000+ yrs. separate periods of a few years of intense activity. • Examples: Aconcagua, Andes (22,825’) and Mt. St. Helens

  23. Aconcagua, Andes

  24. Aconcagua

  25. Mt. St. Helens

  26. Mt. St. Helens

  27. Cinder Cone Volcanoes • Cinder cones are the smallest volcanoes (< 500’), formed by explosive eruptions of lava. Blown violently into the air, the erupting lava breaks apart into fragments called cinders that fall and accumulate around the vent. • Cinder cones are temporary geologic features as they are easily eroded. They have short life spans as gas causing violent eruptions is quickly depleted. • Example: Paricutin, Mexico

  28. Paricutin, Mexico

  29. 1950 1944 1966 1946 1948

  30. Evolution of Paricutin

  31. Monitoring and Predicting Eruptions • Volcanic activity is monitored using several observations: • Land deformation • Ash clouds • Tremors- measured by seismic data • Volcanic Tremors (VT) • Rockfall (RF)

  32. Active,or Recently Active, Volcanoes

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