volcanoes. two types of volcanoes shield volcanoesstratovolcanoes (composite)

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Shield Volcanoes LAVA and ERUPTION Lava is made of BASALT rock. Basaltic lava is runny (like milk). Eruptions are quiet, and lava runs downhill.

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VOLCANOES

Two Types of Volcanoes

Shield Volcanoes StratoVolcanoes (composite)

Shield VolcanoesLAVA and ERUPTION

• Lava is made of BASALT rock. • Basaltic lava is runny (like milk).• Eruptions are quiet, and lava runs downhill.

Shield VolcanoesSHAPE

• Shield Volcanoes have broad bases and gentle slopes.

• The top of a shield volcano is called a caldera.

Shield Volcano

Shield VolcanoesBIGGEST SHIELD VOLCANO

Olympus Mons – on Mars!!

StratoVolcanos (Composite) EXAMPLE: Mt. Hood in Oregon

Before Eruption

StratoVolcanos (Composite) EXAMPLE: Mt. Hood in Oregon

AFTER Eruption in 1980

StratoVolcanos(Composite) LAVA and ERUPTION

• Lava is usually made of GRANITE• Lava is thick and plugs up gases in the volcano.

(Think of a stuffy nose)• Eruptions are violent and explosive.• There are long periods of time between eruptions.

StratoVolcanos(Composite) SHAPE

• Thick lava makes steep slopes.

Measuring an Earthquake

San Francisco Earthquake of 1906

Upon hearing the first news of the earthquake, Mr. Jack London (a writer) -who lives only forty miles from San Francisco-received a telegraph asking him to go to the scene of the disaster and write the

story of what he saw. Mr. London started at once, and he sent the following dramatic description of the tragic events he saw in

the burning city.

May 5, 1906THE earthquake shook down in San Francisco hundreds of thousands

of dollars worth of walls and chimneys. But the fires that followed burned up hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of property. There is no estimating within hundreds of millions the actual damage caused. Not in history has a modern city been so completely destroyed. San Francisco is gone. Nothing remains of it but memories and a small row of houses on its borders. Its industrial section is wiped out. Its business section is wiped out. Its social and residential section is wiped out. The factories and warehouses, the great stores and

newspaper buildings, the hotels, are all gone. Only a few houses remain of what was once San Francisco.

Within an hour after the earthquake shock the smoke of San Francisco's burning was a bright tower visible a hundred miles away. And for three days and nights this bright tower was visible in the sky, reddening the

sun, darkening the day, and filling the land with smoke.

On Wednesday morning at a quarter past five came the earthquake. A minute later the flames were leaping upward. In a dozen different quarters south of Market Street, in the working-class neighborhood, and in the factories, fires started. There was no stopping the flames. There was no organization, no communication. All the technologies of a twentieth century city had been destroyed by the earthquake. The streets were piled with the trash of fallen walls. The telephone and

telegraph systems were broken. And the great water-lines had burst. All the clever plans and defenses of man had become useless by

thirty seconds' twitching of the earth-crust.

Market Street

San Francisco Earthquake of 1906

Actual Magnitude:

7.8

Japan’s Killer Quake

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