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Today – 4/13 More volcanoes! First Mars shot - hill Matian basalt Martian dune field Frozen Martian Sea Last Time Hotspots – mantle plumes reach the surface; decompression melting to form basaltic magma; Hawaii, Mars, Venus; independent of plate boundaries Intrusive v. extrusive: coarse v. fine texture depends on cooling rate Three kinds of volcano: shield, stratovolcano, caldera – depends on magma type Last Time – Shield Volcano Built up from repeated basalt flows Basalt has high Fe / Mg, high temperature, low Si, low gas content, low viscosity (stickiness) MOR’s, hotspots, areas of continental extension Stratovolcano Built from alternating layers of pyroclastic & andesite lava flows Magma – intermediate temperature, gas content, composition, viscosity St. Helens, Monserrat, Pinatubo, Tambora Form above subduction zones Wet melting of the mantle Wet Melting of the Mantle Mount Ngauruhoe, New Zealand Classic Stratovolcano --- 1000s of feet high. Pyroclastic Flows - - - - Mayon Philippines 1968 - - - - o Hot: 600 C Fast: 60 to 100 mph Mt. Vesuvius & Pompeii, Italy AD 79 Cascade Volcanic Arc ----Lassen Peak Crater Lake Mt.St.Helens Mt. Rainier - - - Part of Pacific Ring of Fire. Mt. Saint Helens, May, 1980 Eruption After Before Mount St. Helens Volcanocam http://www.fs.fed.us/gpnf/volcanocams/msh/ Space Needle view Seattle, WA and Mount Rainier: Most dangerous volcano in North America? Mount Rainier, Most dangerous volcano in North America? Mount Pinatubo Tectonic Setting Volcanoes – Agents of Climate Change Mount Pinatubo, Philippines 1991 Mt. Pinatubo Ash Circles the Earth Earth’s surface cooled 1 °F for two years. Climatic Effects of Volcanism Volcanic particles in stratosphere interact with man-made CFC’s to destroy ozone. Particles settle out in 2-3 years, ozone layer recovers. Volcanoes add CO2 to the atmosphere (10% of anthropogenic emissions), contributing to longterm global warming SO2 in the stratosphere reacts with water to form sulfuric acid, which absorbs solar energy and reradiates it into space, creating short term cooling. Sulfuric acid droplets settle out after several years Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” Indonesia Tectonic Setting Indonesia Volcanoes – 130 Active! Tambora, April 1815 Largest stratovolcano eruption in recorded history 1816 – year without a summer. June snow in New England, frost in July and August. Crop failure – oats from 12 cents to 92 cents. Settlers move to midwest, Mary Shelley writes Frankenstein. Famine in Europe. Stratovolcano v. Caldera Explosions 5000 4500 4000 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 St Helens Tambora 1815 Ystone 1.2 Ma Ystone 0.6 Ma Ystone La Garita 2.2 Ma 28 Ma St. Helens v. Caldera Explosions Caldera Explosions Caldera – LARGE volcanic crater caused by the collapse of a magma chamber after a big eruption Convergent margins, hotspots under continents Wet melting of the continental crust Inconceivably cataclysmic Often called “supervolcanoes” Magma – low temperature, high gas content, high viscosity, high silica content = HIGHLY explosive “Nice” Caldera – Kilauea Wet Melting of the Continental Crust Calderas Often formed by explosive eruption. Crater Lake fills caldera formed by collapse during massive eruption of Mt. Mazama 6600 years ago. Caldera Formation Eruption Collapse Figure 7.12: Sequence of events in the formation of Crater Lake. Last Big One – 74 Ka, Toba, Sumatra 2,800 cubic kilometers of material ejected Cause of the human genetic bottleneck? Long Valley Caldera, California - A very dangerous volcano http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/recenteqs/Maps/Long_Valley.html Left: Cross section of Long Valley Caldera. Right: Lasers monitor ground swelling at Long Valley Caldera Hot Spot Volcanism Yellowstone Hot Spot Yellowstone Hotspot Volcanoes Go to the Movie Internal Heat Generation Earth Remnant heat from formation, much of which is stored in the liquid core Decay of radioactive elements Satellites of large planets Gravitational energy turned into heat – “tidal friction” Io – Most Volcanically Active Spot in the Solar System Io v. Titan Io – moon of Jupiter Sulfur / silicate magma Titan – moon of Saturn Ammonia-water solution magma Igneous Rock Bodies Small ones Sill – horizontal tabular body Dike – vertical tabular body Volcanic neck – pipelike remains of a vent Big ones Pluton – large igneous intrusion Batholith – really large igneous intrusion Igneous Rock Bodies Figure 7.15 on page 148 of The Blue Planet Igneous intrusive landforms Plutons and Batholiths: Large igneous intrusive rock bodies. Crystallized deep within crust. Exposed by uplift and erosion. Igneous intrusive rocks formed close to surface: Dikes, Sills, Volcanic Necks Sills Volcanic Necks Dikes QuickTime™ and a Photo - JPEG decompressor are needed to see this picture. Beneficial Aspects of Volcanoes Outgassing formed oceans, atmosphere Ash produces rich, fertile soil Mineral deposits Geothermal energy Beautiful sunsets! Geyser, New Zealand Water circulates through cooling magma bodies. Hot brines deposit minerals with copper, lead, zinc, gold, silver. Gold & Quartz Veins gold quartz Deposited in fractures by hot water (50 to 200 oC). Volcanic Hazards Ash falls – choke people, animals, kill animals that eat it, collapse roofs – worsened by rain Pyroclastic flows – suffocation and burning, knock over anything in their way Mudflows (lahars) – ice and snow melt, rain on ash flow Volcanic landslide Lava flow Poisonous gas emission – Lake Nyos in Cameroon, 1700 CO2 suffocation deaths http://perso.wanadoo.fr/mhalb/nyos/webcam.htm Igneous Rocks Tell Their Story Just as sedimentary strata record the environments of their deposition, igneous rock bodies and layers record the history of magmatism and volcanism in and on the Earth. Rock types and rock distribution tell what kind of activity occurred and radioisotopic dating tells when