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VOLCANOES. Formation. Magma is forced upward flows out of an opening in crust. Parts of a Volcano. Parts. Vents –areas from which lava flows. Crater – bowl shaped dent where vent is located. Parts. Gas- most common steam, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide . Lava- molten rock on surface .
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Formation • Magma is forced upward flows out of an opening in crust
Parts • Vents –areas from which lava flows • Crater – bowl shaped dent where vent is located
Parts Gas- most common steam, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide Lava- molten rock on surface Ash- VERY small rock , minerals, volcanic glass less than 2 mm
Parts • Conduit - a pipe that extends from magma chamber to vent • Magma chamber – area where magma is stored until it erupts
LOCATION • Divergent boundaries • Convergent boundaries • Hot spots
Divergent Boundaries • Plates move apart forming rifts • Lava flows forms rifts & cools quickly by seawater • Keeps building until it rises above sea level
Convergent Boundaries • Plates move together (collide) • Oceanic slide under continental • Older oceanic under younger oceanic • Plate melts down to form magma • Then forced upward
Andes Mountains Chile Ecuador
Cascade Mountains Mt. Rainier Mt. St. Helens
Hot Spots • Magma burns through crust • NOT near a boundary
Factors that control type of eruption • Trapped gases • water vapor, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide • Composition of Magma
Factors that control type of eruption Trapped gases (water vapor, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide Composition of Magma Low silica basaltic magma quiet eruption • Gases can escape easily less pressure quiet eruption
Factors that control type of eruption Trapped gases (water vapor, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide Silica rich rhyolitic magma explosive eruption Composition of Magma • Gases build up to high pressure explosive eruptions
Eruption Products Pyroclasts
Eruption Products • Pyroclastics (broken pieces of volcanic rock)- tephra Ash Bombs Cinders Blocks
Eruption Products Pahoehoe • Lava Aa Pillow
Eruption Products • Gases • Water • Carbon dioxide • Sulfur dioxide
Types of Volcanoes • Shield volcano • Quiet eruptions • Basaltic magma • Fast moving lava • Very large • Broad gentle slope • Can erupt hundreds of feet into air fountains • Kilauea
Types of Volcanoes • Composite (Stratovolcanoes) • Explosive eruptions • Andesitic or rhyolitic magma • Can switch from quiet to explosive forming layers of tephra and lava • Steep sided • Tall • Mt. St. Helens
Types of Volcanoes • Cinder cone volcano • Explosive eruptions • Small in size • Steep sided loosely packed • Short lived • Paricutin
Classification of volcanoes • Active- currently active or erupted in recorded history Kilauea
Classification of volcanoes • Dormant –“resting“ not currently erupting but likely to do so Mt. Hood, Oregon
Classification of volcanoes • Extinct –not erupted in recorded history and are not expected to erupt again Mount Kilimanjaro
Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions • Hawaiian • Quiet • Very fluid lava • Little explosive activity
Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions • Strombolian • small amounts of lava in very short bursts • impressive booming sounds, but the eruptions are relatively small • tephra
Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions • Vulcanian • short, violent, small explosion • tephra, ash clouds, and pyroclastic flows Santiaguito volcano in Guatemala
Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions • Pelean • large quantity of gas, dust, ash and lava fragments • pyroclastic flows • one of the most dangerous - tremendous destruction Mont Pelee
Kinds of Volcanic Eruptions • Plinian • largest and most violent • propels pyroclastic material as high as 30 miles • huge amount of tephra • extremely fast moving lava Mt. St. Helens
Effects of Eruptions • Lava • Destroys whatever is in its path • Usually not harmful to humans
Effects of Eruptions • Gas • Some are poisonous • Acid rain
CAMEROONS… Africa carbon dioxide poisoning Sulfur banks
Effects of Eruptions • Pyroclastics • Collapse buildings • Breathing problems • Kills vegetation • Suffocates and buries animals & people
Effects of Eruptions • Pyroclastic flow • Superheated gas and debris rush down side of volcano • faster than 700 km/hour, higher than 1000 degrees C