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Mrs. Gordon Earth Science Tuesday, July 03, 2018
Notes 17 – Volcanoes Mrs. Gordon Earth Science Tuesday, July 03, 2018
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10,200-foot Redoubt Volcano about 100 miles southwest of Anchorage
1. What is a volcano? A. Volcano – a weak spot in Earth’s crust where magma rises to the surface. Mount Etna in Sicily, Italy. Lava pools at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. 10,200-foot Redoubt Volcano about 100 miles southwest of Anchorage
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B. Explosiveness: Silica (quartz) content –
low silica = quiet eruptions = fluid and runny lava, LOW viscosity like water high in silica = explosive eruptions = thick and pasty lava, HIGH viscosity like honey
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C. Volcanic Activity Terms:
~ Pyroclastic flow – Massive cloud of HOT ash, rocks, and gases ~ Lahar – Gigantic mud flow ~ Caldera – depression formed when a volcano collapses (Yellowstone, Crater Lake)
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2. Where do volcanoes occur?
Most occur near plate boundaries. ~ Ring of Fire – a major volcanic belt that rims the Pacific Ocean.
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Eruption in April 2010 of Iceland’s volcano Eyjafjallajokull.
A. Divergent boundaries - (ocean floor, Iceland) - two plates ripping apart and magma squeezes up / between Eruption in April 2010 of Iceland’s volcano Eyjafjallajokull. Laki is a volcanic system, belonging to Katla the central volcano in Iceland, and was at the origin of the biggest volcanic eruption on earth in historical times (1783), in the form of a flood basalt.
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B. Convergent boundaries - (Cascades = Mt. St
B. Convergent boundaries - (Cascades = Mt. St. Helens) - one plate is pushed under another, melts, and through convection, magma rises up. Picture by US Geological Survey scientist, Austin Post, on May 18, 1980.
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C. Hot spots - (Hawaii, Yellowstone) – a large concentration of heat in one area, magma burns through the crust.
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3. Types of Volcanoes: Fissure Eruption
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Attach Diagram across from Notes 17
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low silica = quiet eruptions
Shield Volcano – low silica = quiet eruptions Galapagos shield volcano
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B. Cinder Cone
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C. Composite Volcano (stratovolcano) –
high silica content = violent eruptions
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D. Fissure Eruption – very low silica
The greatest volumes of volcanic material come from fissure eruptions. Most occur on the ocean floor. Ex: Snake River flood basalts, along the Columbia River, seafloor spreading.
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