1 / 33

Why do people live in volcanic areas?

Why do people live in volcanic areas?. What are the advantages? What happens when it erupts?. These are the countries we are going to mention today – do you know which they are?. People live close to volcanoes because they felt that the advantages outweighed the disadvantages.

jacie
Télécharger la présentation

Why do people live in volcanic areas?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Why do people live in volcanic areas? What are the advantages? What happens when it erupts?

  2. These are the countries we are going to mention today – do you know which they are?

  3. People live close to volcanoes because they felt that the advantages outweighed the disadvantages. • Most volcanoes are perfectly safe for long periods in between eruptions • Today, about 500 million people live on or close to volcanoes. • We even have major cities close to active volcanoes. Popocatapetl is a volcanic mountain less than 50 miles from Mexico City in Mexico. • In short, the main things that attract people to live near active volcanoes are minerals, geothermal energy, fertile soils and tourism. • Lets look at each one...

  4. Minerals • Magna rising from deep inside the earth contains a range of minerals. • This means that minerals such as tin, silver, gold, copper and even diamonds can be found in volcanic rocks. • Hot gasses escaping through vents of active volcanoes also bring minerals to the surface, notably sulphur, which collects around the vents as it condenses and solidifies.

  5. Geothermal Energy • Geothermal energy means heat energy from the earth. • The heat from underground steam is used to drive turbines and produce electricity, or to heat water supplies that are then used to provide household heating and hot water. • Where steam doesn't naturally occur it is possible to drill several deep holes into very hot rocks, pump cool water down one hole and extract steam from another hole close by.

  6. Geothermal Energy • Countries such as Iceland make extensive use of geothermal power, with approximately two thirds of Iceland's electricity coming from steam powered turbines. • Iceland has over 200 volcanoes and 800 hot springs • 26% of Iceland’s electricity comes from Geothermal Power. • Reykjavik is said to be “the most unpolluted capital in Europe.”

  7. Other uses of Geothermal power in Iceland • It is also used for recreational purposes • Blaa Lonio - The Blue Lagoon. In the middle of this huge lava field sits this pool of seawater naturally heated by the geothermal activity below the surface

  8. Fertile Soils • Volcanic rocks are rich in minerals, but when the rocks are fresh the minerals are not available to plants. • The rocks need thousands of years to become weathered and broken down before they form rich soils. • When they do become soils though, they form some of the richest ones on the planet. • The Naples area, which includes Mount Vesuvius, has such rich soils thanks to two large eruptions 35,000 and 12000 years ago. Both eruptions produced very thick deposits of ash and broken rocks which have weathered to rich soils.

  9. Tourism • Around the volcano may be warm bathing lakes, hot springs, bubbling mud pools and steam vents. • Geysers are always popular tourist attractions, such as Old Faithful in the Yellowstone National Park, USA. Old Faithful is such a popular tourist feature that it even has its own 24 hour Old Faithful webcam. This one is in New Zealand

  10. Tourism • Iceland markets itself as a land of fire and ice, attracting tourists with a mix of volcanoes and glaciers, often both in the same place. • The wild, raw and barren volcanic landscapes also attract tourists who want to see what the early planet may have looked like. • Locals economies can profit from volcanism throughout the year, whereas skiing, for example, has only a limited winter season. • In Uganda, a country trying hard to increase its tourist industry, the volcanic region around Mt Elgon is being heavily promoted for it's landscape, huge waterfalls, wildlife, climbing and hiking and its remote 'get away from it all' location.

  11. Building Materials • Blocks of lava are used for building materials • Granite is a volcanic rock • Ash is used in cement to build with.

  12. They stay there because there is nowhere else to go – it is home • Some people are too poor to leave their home (especially in LEDCs) – also poor education does not explain why they should move further away • Even when people can afford to leave the area they may be too attached to their homes to leave. Their families have been there for generations. • And there are so many people living in these dangerous areas, that it would difficult if not impossible to re-house them, especially as many areas that provide food for so many other people.

  13. Warning Signs • Before an eruption, magma moves into the area beneath the volcano and collects in a magma chamber, or reservoir. • As it comes closer to the surface, the magma releases gases. • These events can offer valuable clues about the likelihood of an eruption. • For example, the movement of magma produces small earthquakes and vibrations • Magma gathering in a chamber causes slight swelling of the volcano's slopes. • Gases released near the volcano can be measured for changes in quantity and makeup.

  14. Monitoring Methods • A number of tools can be used to record these warning signs. • Seismographs can detect small earthquakes, • while tiltmeters and geodimeters can measure the subtle swelling of a volcano. • Spectrometers can measure amounts of sulfur dioxide • a telltale gas that is released in increasing quantities before an eruption. • Using these and other tools, it's possible to closely monitor activity at an awakening volcano. • Volcanologists are becoming very skilled at predicting the likelihood of an eruption.

  15. Prediction of Volcanoes

  16. After the eruption….

  17. So you are living in a volcanic zone? What can you do to stay safe: Case study Mr Rainier, Washington State, USA

  18. What is done to protect the area around Mt. Rainier?

  19. Volcanic Hazard management • Describe the location of Mt Rainer • List 4 volcanic hazards associated with Mt Rainer • What is a Lahar? • Using the Map of lahar flows around Mt Rainer: Describe and explain the pattern of volcanic hazards associated with Mt Rainer • Explain 3 ways in which the volcanic hazards around Mt Rainer are managed in the area surrounding the volcano. • . Using the information from FEMA produce a poster for people in the Mt Rainer area to explain to them what to do during an earthquake Hazard.

  20. What is done to protect the area around Mt. Rainier? • Due to being so close to the Seattle-Tacoma Metropolitan Area, 14,411 foot tall Mount Rainier is the most dangerous volcano in the continental United States. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3x_lmWasD0&feature=player_embedded#! What the do to prevent a disaster • Monitoring of the volcano by The USGS- look at historic records, GPS mapping to check for any bulges in the volcano, gas sampling- changes can indicated changes in the magma below • Evacuation plans- routes through the park. More than 150,000 people reside on the deposits of previous lahars in the Seattle- Tacoma metropolitan area. • Because of the higher level of risk from lahars in the Carbon and Puyallup River valleys, the USGS have installed a lahar-detection and warning system. The system that detects the ground vibrations of a lahar. • Land use planning- limiting settlement along river beds as this is where the lahars will flow , spraying lava to cool it down, digging ditches to divert the flow away from areas at risk

  21. Question from Jan 2012 paper

  22. Examples of questions Outline why people continue to live on volcanic islands (4) • For and area you have studied that is prone to volcanoes explain why people continue to live there (6)

More Related