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Volcanoes and Volcanic Hazards Mt. Etna, Italy Classify Volcanoes by… Eruptive Style Volcanic Activity Shape of Volcano/ Ejected Material But first…need to understand viscosity. Viscosity Viscosity: measure of a material’s resistance to flow. (How much it doesn’t want to flow.) Basically, how thick it is. Very thick = very viscous Less thick = less viscous High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? High, medium, or low viscosity? Viscosity is affected by: 1. Composition 2. Temperature Composition Lava is like cookie dough! A little flour, runny dough! A little silica, runny lava! A lot of flour, thick dough! A lot of silica, thick lava! Composition Mafic: describes magma or igneous rock that is rich in magnesium and iron (Fe) and is generally dark in color. Felsic: describes magma or igneous rock that is rich in feldspars and silica and that is generally light in color. Intermediate: in between the two. It is the amount of silica that affects viscosity! Which is more viscous, a mafic, felsic, or intermediate magma? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Mafic, intermediate, or felsic? Composition The more silica it has, the more viscous it is. Less silica, less viscous. Example: Felsic lava (rhyolite) is more viscous than mafic lava (basalt) Viscosity is affected by: 1. Composition 2. Temperature Temperature Lava is like syrup! •Hot syrup is runny, and so is hot lava! •Cold syrup is thick, and so is cold lava! Temperature The hotter the magma/lava, the less viscous it is. The cooler the magma/lava, the more viscous it is. High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? High, medium, or low temperature? Classify Volcanoes by… Eruptive Style Volcanic Activity Shape of Volcano/Ejected Material Eruptive Style The eruptive style or explosiveness of a volcanic eruption depends on: viscosity of the magma Amount of dissolved gases Eruptive Style (cont.) Dissolved gases play an important role Magma has dissolved gasses in it. Gases expand within a magma as it nears the Earth’s surface due to decreasing pressure The violence of an eruption is related to how easily gases escape from magma Example: Soda, like magma, has dissolved gasses in it. However, the can puts so much pressure on the gasses that they are dissolved (no bubbles!) When the pressure is released by the can being opened, the bubbles form and try to push through and leave the soda! It is the same with magma! When magma is deep in the earth, there is a lot of pressure on it. As the magma moves closer to the surface, there is less pressure on it. Since the pressure on the magma is less now, the dissolved gasses start to form bubbles, causing the magma to expand. This builds up internal pressure. •The bubbles try to leave the magma, just like the bubbles in the soda! •This also builds up internal pressure. Eruptive Style Explosive/Violent Eruptions Quiet Eruptions Remember: magma is more viscous than soda. So… If the magma is very viscous, bubbles don’t escape easily. If the bubbles can’t escape, they build up pressure in the magma. •Pressure builds up so much that fracturing in the overlying rock occurs, •This lowers the confining pressure (the pressure keeping it in) more, and even more gas bubbles form. The volcano eventually explodes when the rocks above it can’t keep the magma in anymore! Therefore, you have a violent eruption! Or… If the magma has a low viscosity, gas bubbles are able to escape easier. Therefore, not much pressure is built up and the lava just flows out gently. Therefore, you have a quiet eruption! Example: 1980 Mt. St. Helens, WA Figure 5.1 (top) Example: 1980 Mt. St. Helens, WA Building Up Pressure Mount St. Helens, Washington Collapse of the volcano’s flank (side) caused the confining pressure to drop rapidly. Violently Releasing Pressure Figure 5.1 (bottom) Most explosive eruptions are followed by “degassed” lava. Example: Mt. St. Helens For six years, extrusions of lava built a dome inside the crater. Then, in October 2004, it erupted again as small gas plumes. USGS Photograph taken on May 19, 1982, by Lyn Topinka. Mount St. Helens, Washington: Debris Avalanche and Eruption Explosive Eruptions Occurs with viscous lavas These lavas have high SiO2 contents High gas contents also contributes to explosiveness Gas pressure builds up until an explosion occurs Example • Mt. St. Helens 1980 Quiet Eruptions The lava is very fluid These lavas have a low SiO2 content Examples Mauna Loa, Hawaii Kilauea, Hawaii The type of eruption depends on the chemical composition of the lava and the gas content Example: Kilauea, Hawaii In the beginning of the eruption, there is an initial release of some pressure, resulting in a lava fountain. Then it just gently flows out! Classify Volcanoes by… Shape of Volcano/ Ejected Material Shield Volcano Composite Volcano/ Composite Cone/ Stratovolcano Classify Volcanoes by… Shape of Volcano/ Ejected Material Shield Volcano Volcano has very gentle slopes Lavas are very fluid (low viscosity); high temperature Typically erupt basalt Hawaiian volcanoes are shields Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Twice as tall as Mt. Everest! Much of Mauna Kea is below sea level; when measured from its oceanic base, its height is 33,500 ft (10,200 m) -- more than twice Mount Everest’s base-to-peak height of 3,650 to 4,650 m. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauna_Kea Mauna Loa, Hawaii. Example: If the lava contains only a little silica, and has a high temperature, it will have a low viscosity. This will cause the lava to be runny and travel very far. A gently-sloping shield volcano is formed. Lava Types Basalt Andesite Rhyolite Magma Type Silica Content Temperature Gas Content Basalt Low (50%) High (950C) Least Viscosity Volcanic Landform Least Shields, Plateaus, Cinder Cones Andesite Intermediate (60%) Intermediate Intermediate Intermediate Composite Cone (750-950 C) (Stratovolc ano) Rhyolite Low (650-750 Most C) High (70%) Most Pyroclastic Flows, Volcanic Domes Therefore… Basaltic lavas generally produce quiet eruptions Highly viscous lavas (andesite or rhyolite) produce more explosive eruptions Classify Volcanoes by… Shape of Volcano/Ejected Material Composite Volcano/ Composite Cone/ Stratovolcano They are characterized by explosive eruptions Eruptions of lava alternate with explosions that heap volcanic debris around the vent Typically erupt andesite Mt. Rainier, Mt. Shasta are examples Mt. Fuji, Japan El Misti, is a symmetrical stratovolcano that lies above the city of Arequipa, Peru. Mt. St. Helens – a typical composite volcano Figure 5.1 Magma Type Silica Content Temperature Gas Content Basalt Low (50%) High (950C) Least Viscosity Volcanic Landform Least Shields, Plateaus, Cinder Cones Andesite Intermediate (60%) Intermediate Intermediate Intermediate Composite Cone (750-950 C) (Stratovolc ano) Rhyolite Low (650-750 Most C) High (70%) Most Pyroclastic Flows, Volcanic Domes Stratovolcano Composite cones first erupt violently because pressure built up in the magma. After the explosion, a viscous magma runs out in a more quiet type of eruption. Pressure begins to build up after the eruption, and the cycle begins again. Types of Erupted Material Gases Lava Pyroclastic Materials Types of Erupted Material Gases 70% Water vapor (H2Ov) 15% Carbon Dioxide (CO2) 5% Nitrogen (N2) 5% Sulfur dioxide (SO2), (STINKY!) 5% others Example: The April 4, 1982 eruption of El Chichon in Mexico may have caused global cooling. • Released a lot of SO2, which combined with water vapor to make sulfuric acid droplets. These droplets absorb solar radiation and scatter it back to space. Types of Erupted Material Lava - molten (liquid) rock Rhyolite – felsic (light-colored), viscous, SiO2-rich, low temperature lava Andesite – intermediate in: color, viscosity, SiO2, and temperature Basalt – mafic (dark-colored), fluid, SiO2poor, high temperature lava Types of Erupted Material Pyroclastic material/ Tephra material ejected into the air during an eruption • Ash: < 2 mm • Cinders/lapilli: 2-64 mm • Blocks and bombs: > 64 mm • Blocks: solid when ejected into the air • Bombs: still molten when ejected into the air Ash erupted from Tambora, Indonesia in 1815 may have blocked sunlight and caused global cooling • Extremely cold spring and summer in 1816: “Year without a summer” • Snowfall and frost in June, July and August • Crops failed • Sea ice across Atlantic shipping lanes Classify Volcanoes by… Volcanic Activity Active - eruptions have occurred in historic times Dormant - no historic eruptions have occurred Seismographs reveal that they are still capable of eruption Extinct - eroded down and essentially gone The Cascade Volcanoes They stretch from Mt. Lassen to the Canadian border north-south through Calif., Oregon, and Washington They are located above a subduction zone at a convergent plate boundary They are mostly composite volcanoes made of andesite They formed within the last 1 million years. They are dormant and all are capable of future violent eruptions Volcanic Hazards Lava Flows Pyroclastic Material / Tephra Pyroclastic Flows Lahars Caldera collapse Lava Flows – BASALT!!! Most lava (90%) is basalt Lava Flows are streams of molten rock. You don’t die from lava flows! Because most eruptions are at MORs World record: 19 miles per hour Fast: 6 mph Typical: less than 1 mile per hour Just move out of the way! Buildings etc. can’t… Basalt Hawaii Hazards - Hawaii Over the Thanksgiving holidays, eight residences were overrun in the community of Kapa`ahu, 3 km west of Kalapana. Lava approaches a house in Kapa`ahu as people wait to see which way the lava will move. Nov. 26, 1986 Lava Flow Feb. 1991 Types of Lava Flows STILL BASALT AA Jagged, blocky surface Pahoehoe Smooth or ropey surface Means “on which one can walk” Lava flows can start as Pahoehoe and then can change into Aa. Pahoehoe has a higher T Cooling and degassing pahoehoe often changes into Aa Kalapana, Hawaii 1990 Pahoehoe covered village of Kalapana Villagers watched for weeks as their town was buried. Lava moved few meters per hour. April, 1990 Welcome to Kalapana 1990 eruption of Kilauea: Kalapana 180 homes, visitor center in a national park, highways, archaeological sites. February 1991 1986 1990? 1973: Heimaey, Iceland Lava flow going to harbor. Sprayed water on the lava from ships in the harbor, “stopping” the lava flow. The 1973 eruption on the island of Heimaey. Photograph by the late Sveinn Eirikksen, fire marshal of the town of Vestmannaeyjar and courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey. Pyroclastic Materials Material ejected into the air from a volcano. Pyro = fire Clast = fragment AKA: Tephra Tephra Tephra: material ejected into the air from a volcano. Tephra is classified by size. Sizes of Tephra Blocks and Bombs: > 64mm Lapilli or cinders: 2-64mm Ash: < 2mm What’s the difference between blocks and bombs? Blocks are solid rock blasted out by the explosion. Bombs are when lava is ejected into the air and becomes smooth in flight. Blocks A volcanic bomb Bombs Ash Ash: < 2mm From viscous magma As magma moves up the vent, the gases quickly expand, generating a froth of melt. As the gases below it expand explosively, the froth is blown into very fine fragments. Mt. Etna, 2002 Mount Pinatubo, Philippines, on June 12, 1991, just days before the volcano's climactic explosion on June 15. Pinatubo, Philippines, 1991 Lapilli or Cinders 2-64 mm in size A cinder cone on Mauna Kea, Hawaii A size comparison of the three types of volcanoes Eruption Column Plume of hot ash and gas that can extend thousands of meters into the atmosphere Mt. Augustine, Alaska Pyroclastic Flow AKA: Nuee Ardante A hot mixture of ash, pumice and gas, traveling down the flanks of a volcano. FAST!!! Often 125 mph (some say over 200mph) Air that is trapped by the pyroclastic flow may be heated enough to provide buoyancy to the flow. Like air hockey Montserrat in 1996 The dense part of the flow stopped at the beach, but the lighter-than-water, denserthan-air, ash cloud separated and flowed across the water for about 100 meters. Pyroclastic Flows (cont.) Mainly from collapse of the eruption column. Gravity overcomes the upward thrust, and the ejecta falls, then flows downslope. Figure 5.22B Mt. St. Helens 60 mph Vesuvius, Italy Ruins of Pompeii, destroyed 79 AD. Vesuvius on horizon. Mount Pelee, Island of Martinique in Caribbean Destroyed town of St. Pierre in 1902 Killed all 28,000 people on the land in less than 5 minutes…except for one. Lahar Lahar: a wet, cement-like mixture of water, mud and volcanic rock fragments that flows down the slopes of a volcano and its river valleys. Volcanic mudflow. Form when Heat from the eruption melts snow and ice, erupted material runs into a river or lake, rain mixing with volcanic material after eruption. Buries entire villages under mud. Lahars are the most dangerous volcanic hazard! Lahars are no laughing mater! Lahar, har, har. Nevado del Ruiz, Columbia Armero Armero Gualí River. Houses and towns located high enough above river channels escaped damage from the lahars. In the Gualí River valley, at least two lahar pulses were reported by eyewitnesses, separated by 5 to 15 minutes depending on distance from the volcano. Eyewitnesses reported that the noise created by the passage of each pulse made their houses and the ground shake and that conversation, even by shouting, was impossible. Photograph by R. Janda on November 26, 1985 Mount Pinatubo Like thousands of other buildings downstream from Mount Pinatubo, this school house was buried by a lahar after the enormous eruption on June 15, 1991. Mt. St. Helens Mount Rainier, WA Year-round snow and ice. 100,000 people live in the valleys around Rainier. Many homes built on lahar deposits. Mount Rainier and Tacoma, Washington, as seen from shore along Commencement Bay. USGS Photograph taken on August 20, 1984, by Lyn Topinka. Spray Park. Photo by John Titland Mount Rainier. Photo by John Wald Mt. Rainier Hazard Map - ash http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2002/fs03402/images/fig3.jpg&imgrefurl=http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2002/fs03402/&h=672&w=520&sz=83&hl=en&start=46&tbnid=N3ZbtHAMIbo8dM:&tbnh=138&tbnw=107&prev=/images%3Fq% 3DMount%2BRainier%26start%3D40%26gbv%3D2%26ndsp%3D20%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Dactive %26sa%3DN Mt. Rainier Hazard Map Lahars Plate Tectonics and Igneous Activity REVIEW Global distribution of igneous activity is not random Igneous activity along plate margins Divergent boundaries AKA spreading centers The greatest volume of volcanic rock is produced along the oceanic ridge system. • Two oceanic plates pull apart • Mantle material and new lavas rise up to fill the gap • Large quantities of basaltic magma are produced Pillow Lavas Remember: most volcanic activity is at MORs at divergent plate boundaries. When lava outpours on the ocean surface, the outer skin quickly cools. Lava breaks through the hardened surface, producing pillow lavas, or pillow basalts. Only occur in underwater environments. Convergent Subduction boundaries zones • Descending plate releases volatiles, lowering the melting point of rock in the mantle wedge. • Magma slowly moves upward • Rising magma can form either: • An island arc if in the ocean • A volcanic arc if on a continental margin “Ring of Fire” Around the Pacific Ocean Most of the world’s explosive volcanoes are found here Due to convergent plate boundaries Intraplate Volcanism Intraplate Volcanism A hot spot is a fixed place where there are eruptions above a mantle plume. Mantle plume: hotter than normal mantle material (remember: solid) that ascends to the surface. Mantle plumes have a bulbous head followed by a narrow tail beneath it. Start as deep as the D” layer (core-mantle boundary). When it nears the top of the mantle, decompression melting occurs, making basaltic magma. The head reaches the surface, creating a large outpouring of lava called flood basalts. After the head is emptied, the tail keeps going, produces a chain of volcanoes as the plate moves above it. As the plate moves, islands move off the hot spot and are no longer “active”. Examples: • Hawaii • Yellowstone (Snake River Plain) Volcanism on a tectonic plate moving over a hot spot Figure 5.41 Hot Spot Volcano Tracks Hawaii Predict the Future… What will happen to the “Big Island?” What will there be in the future? There is a new volcano, Loihi, forming off the coast of the big island! (still underwater) There will soon* be a new island! *Soon being about 10,000 years! Buy your tickets now! Loihi Yellowstone Hot spots can occur anywhere with a plume under it. Through Oceanic Crust (basaltic) Through Continental Crust (andesitic and rhyolitic) Hot spots help determine past plate movement Study for exam!