GEOL 3310 Test 2 (CH 9, 2, 4, 5)
Shield volcano characteristics
1. largest 2. almost exclusively basalt 3. gentle slope (2-10 degrees) 5. from hotspot volcanism 6. generates pahoehoe and aa lava
About how many people live near volcanoes?
1/2 billion
How many volcanoes are active in the world today?
500
Mt. St. Helens exploded depositing over _____ of ash over a _____ state area.
540 million tons, 3
California has _____ volcanoes.
66
dissolved gases in Hawaiian eruptions
70% Water Vapor 15% Carbon Dioxide 5% Nitrogen 5% Sulphur Dioxide 5% Chlorine, hydrogen, argon
Ring of Fire
A major belt of volcanoes that rims the Pacific Ocean
Magma
A molten mixture of rock-forming substances, gases, and water from the mantle
cinder cone volcano
A small, steeply sloped volcano that forms from moderately explosive eruptions of pyroclastic material.
composite volcano characteristics
A tall, cone-shaped mountain in which layers of lava alternate with layers of ash and other volcanic materials. Located mostly on the "Ring of Fire".
convergent boundary
A tectonic plate boundary where two plates collide, come together, or crash into each other.
columnar jointing
A type of fracturing that yields roughly hexagonal columns of basalt; columnar joints form when a dike, sill, or lava flow cools.
dormant volcano
A volcano that has erupted sometime in the last several thousand years, but has not erupted in the last few hundreds years.
extinct volcano
A volcano that has not erupted since recorded human records
Lahar
An avalanche of volcanic ash, water and mud down the slopes of a volcano
Eruption of Mount Vesuvius
August 24th, 79 AD
cinder cone volcano example
Capulin, NM and Paricutin, Mexico
Basalt Plateau example
Columbia Plateau
Anatomy of a volcano
Conduit/pipe, vent, crater, caldera, parasitic cones, fumaroles
Volatiles
Dissolved gases in magma that vaporize at surface pressure
Pumice - Igneous
Extrusive Light colored white to grey, dull texture, floats in water, formed from the bubbly froth at the top of lava.
Plutons
Intrusive igneous rock bodies, including batholiths, stocks, sills, and dikes, formed through mountain-building processes and oceanic-oceanic collisions; can be exposed at Earth's surface due to uplift and erosion.
active volcano examples
Kilauca, Hawaii and Mt. St. Helens
extinct volcano example
Kohala, Hawaii
pillow lava
Lava that cools underwater, taking on a distinctive pillow-like shape as it hardens
How is volcanic rock produced along the oceanic ridge system?
Lithosphere pulls apart Less pressure on underlying rocks Partial melting occurs Large quantities of fluid basaltic magma are produced
Lava
Magma that reaches Earth's surface
Caldera Examples
Mt. St. Helens, Crater Lake in Yellowstone
dormant volcano example
Muana Kea, Hawaii
types of lava flows
Pahoehoe and Aa
decompression melting
Partial melting of hot mantle rock when it moves upward and the pressure is reduced to the extent that the melting point drops to the temperature of the body.
volcanic neck example
Ship Rock, New Mexico and Devil's Tower, Wyoming
pyroclastic material
The volcanic rock ejected during an eruption, including ash, pumice, lapilli, cinders, blocks, bombs
Yellowstone Supervolcano
Threat to USA, large hot spot of mantle magma sits beneath yellowstone national park, if it erupts it could be a catastrophe
scoria cone
a glassy, mafic, igneous basaltic rock containing abundant air-filled holes
pyroclastic flow (nuee ardente)
a highly heated mixture, hot gases largely infused with ash fragments produced by composite cones, traveling down the flanks of a volcano or along the surface of the ground at speeds up to 200 km (125 miles) per hour
Calderas
a huge, steep-walled, bowl-shaped depression formed when an empty magma chamber collapses after a volcanic eruption which size exceeds 1 km in diameter
silica
a material found in magma that is formed from the elements oxygen and silicon we will use quartz in this class
volcano conduit
a pipe that carries magma from the magma chamber up through the crust until it reaches the surface
crater
a summit depression greater than 1 km diameter
sill pluton
a tabular concordant pluton resembling buried lava flows and may exhibit columnar joints
dike pluton
a tabular discordant pluton
Lahar Flow
a type of mudflow or debris flow composed of a slurry of pyroclastic material (ash and water) and rocky debris produced mostly by melted glaciers or rain
parasitic cone
a volcanic cone that forms from fissures on the flank of a larger volcano
active volcano
a volcano that is erupting or has erupted in the last few hundred years
The greatest volume of volcanic rock is produced
along the oceanic ridge system.
Basalt Plateaus (flood basalts)
basaltic lava extruded from elongated crustal fractures or fissures and spreads widely to create vast, flat lava plains, sometimes covering 10's or 100's of thousands of square kilometers.
Types of plutons include
batholiths, stocks, sills, dikes, and laccoliths
Crater Lake sits in a _____ with Wizard Island a _____ _____ in it.
caldera, cinder cone
The chain of 17 major olcanoes/mountains in California, Oregon, and Washington State is call the_____
cascade range.
factors that determine the violence of a volcano eruption
composition, temperature, and dissolved gasses in magma
Second amount of volcanoes are located...
confined to the deep ocean basins (basaltic lavas)
Mt. St. Helens with Spirit Lake at its base had been _____ for over 123 years.
dormant
ash
fine, glassy fragments
Columbia River Basalts
flood basalts in NW North America
basaltic lavas are more
fluid
Mt. St. Helens exploded sending a _____ cloud 72,000 ft high.
gas
factors effecting viscosity of magma - composition
high silica - high viscosity (rhyolitic lava) low silica - more fluid (basaltic lava)
fumaroles
holes or cracks serving as escape vents for underground gases
interplate volcanism are
hot spots
Third amount fo volcanoes are located...
in the interiors of continents
thick piles of unconsolidated ash + a hurricane =
lahar
Mt. St. Helens exploded melted snow cap formed a _____ that traveled along the _____ to the northwest of the volcano.
lahar, river drainage system
----- + heat & ash =
lahar.
volcanic bombs
large symmetrical blobs of magma that harden in the air
batholith pluton
largest intrusive body that often occurs in groups, surface exposure is 100+ kilometers and frequently form the cores of mountains
factors effecting viscosity of magma - volatiles
mainly water vapor and carbon dioxide gases expand near the surface provide the force to extrude lava viscous magma produces a more violent eruption
viscosity
measure of a liquid's resistance to flow
Devil's Tower is a _____ of an extinct _____.
neck, volcano
Most volcanoes are located...
on the margins of the ocean basins
hot spot volcanoes
produces a chain of volcanos as in Hawaii, can arise from the ocean floor, can arise on continents, and may arise in the interior of lithospheric plates
What type of event buried Pompeii in steam, gases, and ash-pumice?
pyroclastic
Mt. St. Helens exploded sending a _____ traveling _____ wiping out _____ of the forest.
pyroclastic ash/gas flow, 670 mph, 230 sq mi
What is more dangerous than lava during a volcanic eruption?
pyroclastic flows
Types of Lava: Pahoehoe
resembles braids in ropes
types of Lava: Aa
rough, jagged blocks
Materials associated with volcanic eruptions
see handout
Types of volcanoes
shield, composite, cinder cone, dome
laccolith pluton
similar to a sill, lens shaped mass, arches overlying strata upward
Mt. Baker gets over 65 feet of _____ per year.
snow
volcanic neck
solid igneous core of a volcano left behind after the softer cone has been eroded
divergent plate boundaries
tectonic plates spreading apart, new crust being formed (ex. mid-ocean ridges, rift valleys).
volcanic pipe
the conduit connecting the crater of a volcano with an underlying magma chamber
geothermal gradient
the gradual increase in temperature with depth in the crust
volcanic blocks
the largest pieces of pyroclastic material, are pieces of solid rock erupted from a volcano
volcano vent
the surface opening connected t4o the magma chamber via a pipe
factors effecting viscosity of magma
volatiles, temperature, silica content
Unlike earthquakes, many _____ _____ may be (almost) _____ by geologists.
volcanic eruptions, predicted
What is one of the lures to volcanoes by people?
volcanic rock produces very rich soil
lapilli (cinders)
walnut size
Magma originates
when solid rock, located in the crust and upper mantle, melts and factors that influenced by the Earth's natural temperature increases because of friction in subduction zones, crustal rocks heated during subduction, and rising hot mantle rocks when depth is not sufficient to melt rock at the lower crust and upper mantle