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Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up A volcano is: • An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape Volcano Features: • Dome: build up of lava and debris surrounding a vent to form a volcano • Vent: the opening in the earth that volcanic materials get erupted from Things that can come out of a volcano: • Lava: molten rock, ability to flow depends on Silica and moisture content (called magma when found inside the earth), made up of crystals volcanic glass, and bubbles • Ash: rock, mineral, volcanic glass (all pieces ejected are around the size of a pinhead) • Tephra: fragments exploded from a volcano (bomb, block, lapilli, ash, cinder) • Lahar: fast moving mix of rock pieces and water, like a fast moving river of muddy rock • Gas: CO2, H2Ovapor, SO2 • Pyroclastic Flow: avalanche of hot volcanic materials, travel very quickly People tend to live near volcanoes because: • • • • They have very fertile soils Contain valuable mineral deposits Are very scenic Tourism Bad things volcanoes can do to the environment: • Destroy the land • Kill plants, animals, and people • Put deadly gases into the air (short term) • Provide about 3% of yearly CO2 output Viscosity is: • The ability of a material to resist flow. How does viscosity effect an eruption? • The more viscous the lava, the more explosive the eruption. • More viscous materials flow very slowly so they ‘jam up’ the volcano vent until there’s too much pressure and they explode. Stratovolcano • • • • Lava viscosity=High Gases: high which leads to explosive eruptions Size: medium Eruption Style: alternates eruptions of lava flows and pyroclastic flows/explosions • Found: subduction zones • Examples: Mt Fuji, Mt St Helens, Krakatoa Cinder Cone • Lava viscosity=Highest • Gases: high, gas charged lava carries lava up in lava fountains • Size: smaller with narrow piles of pyroclastic particles • Eruption Style: explodes vertically with small cinders forming and falling straight back down • Found: typically found on sides of other volcanoes • Examples: Paricutin, Wizard Island Shield Volcano • Lava viscosity=Low • Gases: low • Size: largest , big base with gently sloping sides • Eruption Style: fluid flow from all directions around vent • Found: Hotspots • Examples: Hawaii, Galapagos, Iceland Hotspots are: • Areas of volcanism not at plate boundaries. • Magma finds a weak spot in the earth’s crust and forces it’s way up to the surface. • Ex: Hawaii, Yellowstone How was Hawaii formed? • The Pacific Plate is moving Northwest over the stationary hotspot that supplies magma to the Hawaiian volcanoes. • As a result, an island chain formed with the oldest volcano being the furthest NW and the youngest (and still active one) being the furthest south.