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Volcanoes: Part One New Terminology • Viscosity – Resistance of a material to flow – Ex: honey vs. tar • Volatiles – Gases dissolved in magma Makin’ Magma… • Recall the asthenosphere… – Mostly solid—very close to melting point—small changes in T and P can create melt • Let’s make some Magma! “Liquid Hot Mag-ma…” • Ways to make magma – Increasing T • A solid melts when it becomes hot enough – Decreasing P • Removal of P allows a solid to expand enough to melt – Addition of water • Wet rock melts at lower temperatures than dry rock Magma Environments • Subduction Zones – Presence of water in subducting crust, increasing T and (generally low P) – Generally felsic extrusives Magma Environments • Spreading centers – Ocean plates pull apart, asthenosphere rises to fill gap—decreasing P causes mantle to melt--mafic intrusvies and extrusives Plate motion Plate motion Upwelling mantle Mantle Plumes • Decreasing P—hot mantle material from core-mantle boundary rises through surrounding mantle and melts as it rises • Mafic extrusives Types of Volcanoes Sizes and Shapes Factors Controlling Size, Shape, and Type of Eruptive Activity • Size – Volume of lava erupted – time • Shape – Viscosity/composition • Explosivity – Viscosity/composition – Gas content Basalt • • • • • • • High in Fe, Mg, Ca Low in silicon 1000-1200°C Most common type of melt Very fluid; up to ~6 mph Very rarely explosive, mostly “lava rivers” Deposits generally thin (several meters) Shield Volcano • Gently sloped shield-shaped volcano several km high and 10s of km in diameter – Built up of many overlapping basalt lava flows – Mauna Loa is taller than Mt. Everest (10 km) but most of it is under water – Common above mantle plumes Basalt Eruptions: Lava • Pahoehoe (“ropy”) – Surface cools but internal parts stay molten – “Skin” folds as material moves below Like so Basalt Eruptions: Lava • “Aa” – commonly believed to be expletive after walking on it – moves faster than Pahoehoe – Skin torn into jagged blocks which cascade down front of flow and are over ridden—like the tread on an earthmover Aa lava flow Lava Tubes • Lavas flowing in channels • Top slowly hardens over • Up to 60 km Basalt Eruptions: Pillow Lavas • Erupted under water – Commonly from mid-ocean ridges – Lava in contact with water cools instantly – Lava inside remains hot and can break out (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3BjOapOSGA) Basalt Eruptions: Fire-fountains • Occur when large amounts of gas rich lava erupted – Bubbles expand as magma moves to surface—causes lava to surge high into the air – Erupted lava is partially molten as it hits the ground—spatter – At very high eruption rates, spatter accumulates to form spatter-fed lava flows – Generally from linear fissures Whee Cinder Cone • Low volume, gas-rich, basaltic eruptions create fragments of material which cool quickly in air – Fragments pile up into cones which exist at the angle of stability for a random mass of stuff – Scoria—”lava rock” used in landscaping – Generally small <300m – Paricutín (from 2/20/43 to 1952, 424 m) Convergent Margin Volcanism Evolved Lavas • Partial melting – Not all minerals have the same melting temperature – When a rock is heated, minerals with lowest melting temperatures melt first—generation of Na, K, Si rich magmas – Evolved lavas—high viscosity, high gas content • Andesite • Dacite • Rhyolite Stratovolcano • Also called composite volcanoes • Composed of alternating layers of lava(generally andesitic or dacitic composition) and pyroclastic (ash and blocks) material • Conical profile • Explosive personalities “Evolved” Eruptions: Explosions • Imagine if sticky mass plugs top of volcano… • gas builds up and “Evolved” Eruptions: Columns • Eruption Columns – Gases separate from magma during ascent due to decrease in pressure – Expand to a froth – Unlike in basalt, viscous magma prevents complete escape – Gas explodes violently at ~surface, propels particles of all sizes into atmosphere – Column propelled upward because it is buoyant— high temp + propelling force of exploding gasses Pyroclastic Material • Anything shot out of a volcano • Range of particle sizes Particles of All Sizes Block Ash-fall deposit Note layering Pyroclastic Flows: Hot stuff, indeed • Occur when large volumes of material are erupted--atmosphere cannot support it – Hot rock and ash flow down sides of volcano at speeds of up to 160 km/hr (100 mph) – Hugs valleys and low spots – Fast (and hot) enough to travel across water – PF video Caldera: Supervolcanoes • Predominantly rhyolite • Large volume eruptions of gas-rich magma causes surface to collapse – Commonly related to mantle plumes beneath continental crust or thinned continental crust • Long Valley Caldera – 600 km3 – A football field ~133,000 miles tall (61% of distance between Earth + Moon) Caldera Formation “Evolved” Eruptions: Lava • Low eruption temperature (compared to basaltic lava): 600-1000°C – Often occur after large, explosive eruptions (the lava is “flat” like a bottle of coke left open for too long) – Viscous: lava often has difficulty breaching crater—lava dome – If crater breached, very thick lava flows-move ~10 ft/day • Some flow fronts reach 150 m (or more) Dacite Rhyolite Case Studies Mt. St. Helens • May 18th, 1980 • “Bulge” on northern flank— caused by development of a crypto-dome—a magma chamber in the body of the volcano • Magnitude 5 earthquake— unstable N. Flank collapses— debris avalanche • MSH height lowered by 1200’ • Left a crater 2 miles wide and .5 miles deep • 230 square miles of wilderness leveled • 58 people killed Yellowstone • Yellowstone national park—three overlapping calderas—caldera at center of park 34 miles wide/1,500’ deep • Last eruption--~650,000 years ago • Repose period-~650,000 years • Will it erupt in our lifetime? • If it did, what kind of effects would it have?