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Volcanoes

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Page 1: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Volcanoes

Page 2: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Page 3: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Volcanoes Volcano: anywhere magma, ash, and gas

erupts onto the surface

Page 4: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Factors Affecting Eruptions

1. Magma Composition

2. Magma Temperature

3. Amount of Dissolved Gases

Page 5: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Magma Types Rate at which magma moves is determined by its

silica content

Felsic: High silica content, light colored, slow moving Bigger Eruptions

Mafic: Low silica content, dark colored, fast moving Calmer Eruptions

Page 6: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Volcanic Material Lava (magma that reaches the surface)

Gases: H20, CO2, Nitrogen, Sulfur…

Tephra: fragments of lava

1. Ash (less than 2mm)

2. Lapilli (2-64mm)

3. Bombs (larger than 64mm)

Page 7: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Lava Flows

Mafic Pahoehoe: Flow with smooth ropelike surface,

quick flowing basalt AA: Rough jagged surface Pillow Lava: Rounded pillow shaped

Felsic Pyroclastic Flow: Superheated flow of gas and rock

from the eruption

Page 8: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Eruption Types

Depending on the eruption type, different volcanoes are formed

Page 9: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Rift Eruptions Occur at long, narrow fractures in the crust

where lava flows out smoothly (mafic) In the ocean, it occurs at spreading centers

(mid-ocean ridges)

Page 10: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Hot Spots Areas of volcanic activity in the middle of a plate Caused by heat source in the mantle that makes

magma rise Creates a chain of volcanic islands overlying plate

moves over it.

Page 11: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Shield Cone Volcanoes Rift Eruptions & Hot Spots make Shield Cone

Volcanoes A broad base and gently sloping sides Usually low amounts of gas, mafic lava that

flows long distances before it cools

Page 12: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Shield Cone Volcanoes

Page 13: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Subduction Boundary Eruption Magma is thick and gas-rich. Plates are subducted, they melt, which floods

the mantle with silica, making it felsic Explosive eruptions of mainly tephra and

pyroclastic flows Form cinder cone volcanoes and

stratovolcanoes

Page 14: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Cinder Cone Volcano A volcanic, circular cone

with steep sides that is mainly made of tephra

Gas rich, felsic lava

Page 15: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Stratovolcano Tall with gentle slope near base and steep

slope near summit. Alternating layers of felsic lava and tephra

deposits. Usually gas rich, felsic lava Lots of pyroclastic flows

Page 16: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Anatomy of a Stratovolcano

Page 17: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Plutons and Volcanism Volcanoes and lava flows are the surface

activities of volcanism Magma below the crust, and its “behavior”

impacts the earth in a variety of ways Plutons: the rock masses that form when

magma cools inside other rocks

Page 18: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Dikes Sheets of igneous rock

that cut vertically through the rock layers they intrude

Page 19: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Sills Sheets of igneous

rocks that are parallel to the layers they intrude

Page 20: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Laccoliths When magmas bulge

upwards forming domelike masses

Page 21: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Volcanic Necks When an extinct

volcano is almost completely eroded, a volcanic neck may be left

Plugs of hardened magma

Page 22: Volcanoes. Classification of Volcanoes Structure Tectonic Region Type of Eruptive Material Level of Activity Location Dangers Posed

Batholiths Largest of the plutons

Form the core of many mountain ranges

Erosion of the mountain will expose them