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Volcanoes and Volcanic Hazards View From Space - Klyuchevskaya, Russia Cleveland Volcano, Alaska Mount Etna From Space Mount Etna From Space Mount Etna From Space Mount Etna Shiveluch, Russia Magma – molten rock beneath the surface Lava – molten rock on the surface Where Does Magma Come From? • Earth’s interior is hot (25 C/km near surface = 1000 C at 40 km) • Pressure inhibits melting – Mantle is solid – Never far below melting point • Volcanoes fed by small pockets 0-100 km deep – Rising hot material may melt – Water can lower melting point Why Igneous Rock Classification Matters • Silica Content = Viscosity • Silica Content Governs Violence of Eruptions – Silica Poor (Basalt): Fluid lavas, generally little explosive activity – Intermediate Lavas (Andesite): Pasty lavas, explosive eruptions common – Silica-Rich Lavas (Rhyolite): Extremely viscous lava and explosive eruptions Basalt (45-52% SiO2) • Slightly modified planetary raw material • Derived directly from mantle – – – – – Oceanic crust Hot Spots and Flood Basalts Oceanic volcanic arcs Early stage of continental volcanic arcs Rift zones with rapid spreading • Fluid lava with little explosive activity • Shield volcanoes, Cinder Cones Plate Tectonics and Volcanoes A Cinder Cone: Wizard Island, Crater Lake, Oregon Paricutin, Mexico 1943-1952 Shield Volcano: Haleakala, Hawaii Andesite (52-66% SiO2) • Mixture of mantle material and continental crust • Continental volcanic chains • Pasty lava with significant explosive activity • Stratovolcanoes Plate Tectonics and Volcanoes Stratovolcano: Mount Shasta, California Stromboli Rhyolite (>66% SiO2) • Mostly remelted continental crust • Settings where magma has a long time to react with continental crust – Late stage of continental volcanic arcs – Slow-spreading Continental Rifts – Continental Hot Spots (Yellowstone) • Catasrtophic explosive activity common • Obsidian domes, magma chamber collapses Lava Dome, California Some Igneous Rocks Are Named on Textural Criteria • • • • Pumice - Porous Obsidian - Glass Tuff - Cemented Ash Breccia - Cemented Fragments Classes of Eruption Effusive • Icelandic • Hawaiian Explosive • Strombolian • Vulcanian • Plinian • Caldera-Forming (Ultra-Plinian) • Phreatic: Classes of Eruption Type Lava Volcano Effects Icelandic Basalt None or Shield Fissure Flows Hawaiian Basalt Shield Strombolian BasaltAndesite Small Stratovolcano Mild, Continuous Vulcanian Andesite Stratovolcano Large eruption cloud Plinian Andesite – Rhyolite Stratovolcano Pyroclastic Flows Caldera-Forming Rhyolite Stratovolcano or None Large Pyroclastic Flows Phreatic Any Steam Blast Any Products of Eruptions Lava Flows Pyroclastic Debris • Bombs • Lapilli • Ash Mudflows Landslides Gases • Steam • Carbon Dioxide • H 2S • SO2 • HCl • HF Environmental Hazards of Volcanoes Pollution • SO2, HCl in Water Lava Flows Falling Ejecta Ash Falls • Building Collapse • Crop Destruction Mudflows • Direct Damage (Colombia, 1985) • Floods (Several Types) Blast (Mt. St. Helens, 1980) Pyroclastic Flow (St. Pierre, 1902) Gas (Lake Nyos, Cameroon, 1986) Volcanic Hazards, Congo Nyiragongo, Congo • At least 34 eruptions since 1982 • Semi-permanent lava lake • Area accounts for 40% of Africa’s historic eruptions • Steep-sided but unusually fluid lava: unique • 1977: Lava lake drains at night, killing 70hundreds • 2002: Lava invades city of Goma: 400,000 evacuated, 45 killed, 4500 buildings destroyed, 120,000 homeless Pyroclastic Flow or Nuee Ardente (French: Fiery Cloud) Welded Tuff, California How Calderas Form Crater Lake, Oregon Mount Mazama: After Mount Mazama: Before Jemez Caldera, New Mexico Valles Caldera, New Mexico Tuff, Valles Caldera, New Mexico Santorini (Thera), Greece Santorini (Thera), Greece Santorini, Greece Santorini, Greece Ash Layer, Santorini Ash Layers, Santorini What Really Destroyed the Minoan Civilization Volcanic Explosivity Index VEI Classification Description Plume Ejecta volume Frequency Example 0 non-explosive < 100 m < 104m³ daily Mauna Loa gentle 100-1000 m > 104 m³ daily Stromboli explosive 1-5 km > 106 m³ weekly Galeras 1993 1 2 Hawaiian Hawaiian Strombolian Strombolian Vulcanian 3 Vulcanian /Pelean severe 3-15 km > 107 m³ yearly Lassen 1915 4 Pelean/Plinian cataclysmic 10-25 km > 0.1 km³ ≥ 10 yrs Soufrière Hills 1995 5 Plinian paroxysmal > 25 km > 1 km³ ≥ 50 yrs St. Helens 1980 6 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian colossal > 25 km > 10 km³ ≥ 100 yrs Pinatubo 1991 7 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian super-colossal > 25 km > 100 km³ ≥ 1000 yrs Tambora 1815 8 Ultra-Plinian > 25 km > 1,000 km³ ≥ 10,000 yrs mega-colossal Toba (73,000 BP) Collapsing Volcanoes – Mount Rainier Shastina and Landslide Deposit Mount Shasta and Landslide Deposit Collapsing Volcanoes - Hawaii Volcanoes and Climate • Stratospheric Ash • Sulfuric Acid Aerosols – Colorful sunset effects – Large amounts can block sunlight • Carbon Dioxide Dating Large Remote Eruptions • • • • Historical Records of Unusual Cold Optical Effects Persistent “Dry Fog” Frost Rings in Trees Frost Ring, 536 AD, Mongolia Recorded Large Distant Eruptions • • • • • • • 1627 BC: Thera? 536 AD: Krakatoa? 626: Unknown 934: Eldgja, Iceland 1258: Unknown 1783: Laki, Iceland 1815: Tambora, Indonesia Tambora 1815 1816: “Year Without A Summer” • 100 cubic km of ash erupted • Global sunset color effects for months • New England – Snow in June and August, Frost in July – Exodus to Midwest • Europe: High prices, food riots Tambora Flood Basalts • Siberian Traps and Permian Mass Extinction? • High Sulfur Content – Aerosols may block significant sunlight – Surface crust may trap sulfur Supervolcanoes? • Magma Chamber Collapse (Yellowstone?) – – – – Destruction of crops Destruction of high technology Economic Disruption Climatic Effects • Flood Basalts – Climatic Effects – Toxicity Long Valley Caldera Long Valley Caldera Bishop Tuff Compaction of Bishop Tuff Toba, Sumatra