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Published byRichard Moody Modified over 9 years ago
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Volcanoes Forms when magma reaches the Earths surface and erupts as lava or ash
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Volcano Formation -Melting occurs in asthenosphere
-Magma is lava underground -Magma is less dense than surrounding rock -rises to lithosphere and creates cracks in the solid rock -cracks are how magma reaches surface
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Plate Boundaries Eruptions on plate boundaries that separate, collide, or are hot spots
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Convergent Plate Boundaries
-most volcanoes are at plate boundaries around the Pacific at subduction zones - this is the Ring of Fire
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Divergent Plate Boundaries
Mostly unnoticed b/c they occur under water - One major divergent boundary that is above water is the East African Rift Valley
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Hot Spots Balloon like plume Usually NOT near plate boundaries
Stationary (non moving) Creates island chains in the ocean (Hawaii)
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Lava -Magma that has reached the surface
Viscosity -measure of a fluids RESISTANCE to flow - low viscosity flows more easily (water) than high viscosity (molasses) - viscosity decreases as temp increases
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Chemical Composition Mafic Lava - low viscosity
- Heavier elements (magnesium and iron) - Usually quiet eruptions Felsic Lava - High viscosity -Lighter elements (silicon, oxygen, aluminum, potassium) - Explosive eruptions
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Volcanoes are classified by their size, shape, and mineral type
Types of Volcanos Volcanoes are classified by their size, shape, and mineral type Composite Cone - form at convergent boundaries - explosive eruptions - large, steep shape 1000’s of meters wide - composed of ash and lava - pyroclastic flows- a fast-moving current of hot gas and rock
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Shield Cone -fluid lava erupts, travels far - broad, wide, flat shape - gas poor -composed of lava -quiet eruption Cinder Cone -high temp - gas rich - mafic -explosive, ejects cinders -smaller 100’s meter range - short eruption cycles - composed of ash
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