Volcanoes - LambertEarth
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Transcript Volcanoes - LambertEarth
Chapter 9 Earth Science
VOLCANOES
Volcanic Eruptions
Volcanoes – are areas of Earth’s surface
through which magma and volcanic gases
pass.
Explosion of a volcanic eruption can turn an entire
mountain into a billowing cloud of ash and rock in
a matter of seconds.
Help form fertile land.
Create some of the largest mountains on
earth.
Volcanic Eruptions
Magma – melted rock below the Earth’s
surface.
Lava – Melted rock above the Earth’s surface.
Mt. Cleveland- Aleutian
Islands, Alaska
Stromboli Volcano - Sicily
Mount Redoubt - Alaska
Nonexplosive Eruptions
Flows of lava are calm.
Releases huge amounts of lava.
Vast areas of the Earth’s surface, are covered with
lava from non-explosive eruptions such as Hawaii.
Types of Lava Flows
Pahoehoe lava flows – sheet like lava flows
that result in continuous surfaces.
Flow smoothly
Move forwards in tongues or lobes and are
characterized by a glassy, plastic skin.
Pahoehoe Lava Flow
Types of Lava Flows
Aa – lava pours out quickly and forms a brittle
crust.
The crust is torn into jagged pieces as molten lava
continues to flow underneath.
Got its name because of the painful
experience of walking barefoot across the
jagged surfaces.
Associated with lava fountaining.
Aa Lava Flow
Lava Fountaining
Lava Fountaining – spraying of lava into the
air pulsing with the pressure of escaping
gases.
Types of Lava Flows
Pillow lava – forms when lava erupts
underwater.
Lava forms rounded lumps that are the shape of
pillows.
Types of Lava
Blocky Lava – cool, stiff lava that does not
travel far from the erupting vent.
Normally forms jumbled heaps of sharp-edged
chunks.
Get it’s shape from oozing from a volcano.
Blocky Lava
What is Inside a Volcano?
Water and Magma Are an
Explosive Combination
If the water content of magma is high, an
explosive eruption is more likely.
Underground the water and magma are under
extreme pressures.
When water and magma rise to the top the gases
expand rapidly, an explosion can result.
Sometime so rapid a water floating version of lava
called Pumice is formed.
Silica-Rich Magma Traps
Explosive Gases
Magma that has a high silica content will tend
to cause explosive eruptions.
Silica-rich magma has a stiff consistency.
Flows slowly and hardens in a volcano’s vents
plugging the vents.
Gas Trapped in a Volcano
The more that is trapped in a volcano the
more explosive it will be due to the rapid rate
in which the gas escapes from the volcano.
What erupts from a Volcano?
Pyroclastic material - forms when magma is
blasted into the air and hardens.
Volcano’s eruptions may alternate between lava
and pyroclastic eruptions.
Volcanic Bombs
Volcanic Bombs – large blobs of magma that
harden in the air.
The shape of the bomb was caused by the magma
spinning through the air as it cooled.
Lapilli
Lapilli – pebblelike bits of magma that
hardened before they hit the ground.
Means “little stones”
Volcanic Ash
Volcanic Ash – forms when the gases in stiff
magma expand rapidly and the walls of the
gas bubbles explode into tiny, glasslike
silvers.
Makes up most of the pyroclastic material in an
eruption.
Volcanic Ash
Pyroclastic Flows
Pyroclastic Flow – produced when enormous
amounts of hot ash, dust, and gases are
ejected from a volcano.
Can move downhill at 200km/h.
Center of the flow can exceed 700 C.