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VOLCANOES AND IGNEOUS ROCKS Objectives • Identify several different categories of volcanic eruptions. • Identify the volcanic hazards. • Describe how temperature, pressure, and water content affect a rock’s melting point. • Identify three properties that distinguish one lava from another. • Distinguish between and identify volcanic and plutonic rocks. • Describe the most common plutonic formations. Volcanoes and volcanic hazards • Volcano – A vent through which lava, solid rock debris, volcanic ash, and gasses erupt from Earth’s crust to its surface – Can be explosive or nonexplosive 1 Volcanoes and volcanic hazards • Lava – Molten rock that reaches Earth’s surface • Magma – Molten rock, which may include fragments of rock, volcanic glass and ash, or gas • Gases Eruptions, landforms and materials • Eruption types – Hawaiian type; fluid eruptions, least explosive – Shield volcano • A broad, flat volcano with gently sloping sides, built of successive lava flows • Produce flood basalts or basalt plateaus (from fissures instead of central vents) Lava flows and shield volcanoes Iceland Shield Volcano-Iceland 2 Mauna Loa, as seen from Kilauea Mauna Loa from Kilauea Eruptions, landforms and materials • Eruption types – Strombolian • More explosive than Hawaiian • Create loose volcanic rock called spatter cones or cinder cones Eruptions, landforms and materials • Eruption types – Vulcanian • More explosive than Strombolian and, as a result, can generate billowing clouds of ash up to 10 km • Produce pyroclastic flows – Hot volcanic fragments (tephra) that, buoyed by heat and volcanic gases, flow very rapidly – Strato (composite) volcano; mixture of lava and pyroclastics 3 Eruptions, landforms and materials • Eruption types – Plinian • Named after Pliny the Elder, who died during eruption of Mount Vesuvius • Most violent eruptions, generating ash columns the can exceed 20 kilometers • Produce steep sided volcanoes, called stratovolcanoes – Composed of solidified lava flows interlayered with pyroclastic material. – Steep sides that curve upward Mt. Fuji Mt. St. Helens, 1980 Lateral Blast 4 Eruptions, landforms and materials Shield volcano Eruptions, landforms and materials Stratovolcano 5 Eruptions, landforms and materials • Viscosity – The degree to which a substance resists flow, • Less viscous liquid is runny • More viscous liquid is thick • Volcanic materials – – – – – Pyroclasts Tephra: General term, all sizes Ash: smallest size Agglomerates: welded larger particles Tuff: welded smaller particles Eruptions, landforms and materials • Other volcanic features – – – – – 1 3 Craters Resurgent dome Thermal spring Geysers Fumaroles 2 4 6 Volcanic hazards • Primary effects – Pyroclastic flows – Volcanic gases • Secondary effects – Related to, but not a direct result of, volcanic activity • • • • Fires Flooding Mudslides Debris avalanche Volcanic hazards Lahars Orting, Washington Mt. Rainier 7 Mt. Pelee, 1902 Town of St. Pierre, Carribean Island of Martinique 30,000 killed Volcanic hazards Volcanic hazards • Tertiary and beneficial effects – Change a landscape – Affect climate on regional and global scale – Renew mineral content and replenish fertility – Geothermal energy – Provide mineral deposits 8 Predicting Eruptions • Establish a volcano’s history – Active (eruption in recorded history) – Dormant • Monitor changes and anomalies – – – – Earthquakes Changes in shape or elevation Volcanic gases Changes in ground temperature – Composition of water Predicting Eruptions How, Why and Where Rocks Melt • Heat and pressure inside Earth – Continental crust: temperature rises 30°C/km, then about 6.7°C/km (geothermal gradient) – Ocean crust: temperature rises twice as rapid 9 How, Why and Where Rocks Melt How, Why and Where Rocks Melt • Effect of temperature and pressure on melting How, Why and Where Rocks Melt • Heat and pressure inside Earth – Fractional melt • A mixture of molten and solid rock – Fractionation • Separation of melted materials from the remaining solid material during the course of melting 10 How, Why and Where Rocks Melt How, Why and Where Rocks Melt • Magma – Molten rock below surface • Lava – Magma when it reaches the surface – Differ in composition, temperature and viscosity How, Why and Where Rocks Melt • Lava – Composition • 45-75% of magma by weight is silica • Water vapor and carbon dioxide – Temperature • Lavas vary in temperature between 750°C and 1200°C • Magmas with high H2O contents melt at lower temperatures – Viscosity • Lavas vary in their ability to flow • Influenced by silica content and temperature 11 How, Why and Where Rocks Melt • The tectonic setting – Lava characteristics influenced by location • Oceanic, divergent margins – Lithosphere (crust) is thin with a steep geothermal gradient • Subduction zones – Aleutian Islands; Andes – Typically have high water content and melt at lower temperatures • Hot- spots; Hawaiian Islands – Lava tends to be hot and basaltic – Build giant shield volcanoes – Continental; Yellowstone • Continental divergent margins are all different – High silica lava How, Why and Where Rocks Melt Pillow lavas, mid-ocean ridge Continental hot spot; silica rich How, Why and Where Rocks Melt Continental-oceanic subduction zone: andesite Oceanic-oceanic subduction zone: andesite Oceanic hot spot: basalt 12 How, Why and Where Rocks spot; red, Melt Yellow-hot volcano Cooling and Crystallization • Crystallization – The process whereby mineral grains form and grow in a cooling magma (or lava) – Classified as: • Volcanic • Plutonic Rate of Cooling • Rapid cooling: Volcanic rocks and textures – Volcanic rock • An igneous rock formed from lava • Glassy • Aphanitic • Porphyritic • Pumice • Vesicular basalt 13 Rate of Cooling Aphanitic, vesicular Porphyritic; 2 sizes of crystals Rate of Cooling • Slow cooling: Plutonic rocks and textures – Plutonic rock • An igneous rock formed underground from magma – Phaneritic-a coarse grained texture • Can have exceptionally large grains (pegmatite) Chemical composition • Igneous rocks subdivided into three categories based on silica content – Felsic-high – Intermediate – Mafic-low 14 Plutons and Plutonism • Plutons – Any body of intrusive igneous rock, regardless of size or shape • Batholith – A large, irregularly shaped pluton that cuts across the layering of the rock into which it intrudes Plutons and Plutonism • Dikes – Forms when magma squeezes into a cross cutting fracture and solidifies • Sills – Magma that intrudes between two layers and is parallel to them 15