Volcanoes
Volcanoes
Volcanoes
lc e
a no Composition
Types of deposits
Types of volcanoes
Distribution
Prediction
Impact of eruptions
Supervolcanoes
Shield volcanoes: dominated by lava flows.
http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/CinderCone.html
Stratovolcanoes: mixture of lavas and pyroclastics.
Syn. Composite volcanoes
Mount Mageik volcano, Alaska
http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/stratovolcano.html
Shield Volcanoes
http://geoimages.berkeley.edu/GeoImages/Johnson/Landforms/Volcanism/ShieldVolcano.html
Typical slopes approximately 15 degrees.
USGS
Low viscosity lava forms fountains of lava flowing from vents near
the volcano summit.
The lava flows easily down the
gentle slopes….reaching the ocean
during some eruptions.
Where the lava is relatively cool eruptions form small
cinder cones on the volcanoes surface.
Cinder Cones
Stratovoclanoes are
constructed from feeder
conduits extending to the
surface.
Granitic (rhyolitic) intrusions are also formed,
becoming trapped within the volcanic pile overlying
the region of subduction.
At least three have erupted over the past several hundred years.
http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/volcanoes/map/index_e.php
Oceanic Ridge Volcanoes
Most volcanic activity is under water.
Intrusion of material from the magma chamber creates
new oceanic crust as the sea floor spreads.
Heat from the mantle (and some magma) rises to the hot
spot.
Rising mantle
material
termed a
mantle plume.
The Hawaiian Islands
consist of eastern active
volcanic islands and
inactive volcanic
islands to the
northwest.
Further northwest of the islands are seamounts
(underwater mountains that are submerged islands).
http://www.biosbcc.net/ocean/marinesci/02ocean/hwgeo.htm
http://www.biosbcc.net/ocean/marinesci/02ocean/hwgeo.htm
The Pacific plate is moving
towards the northwest.
April 26 May 2
Earthquakes: generated as the magma moves up the
feeder conduit to the vent.
Death was not by burial but by lung failure due to inhaling the ash.
Pyroclastic flows
Lahars are fast moving mudflows that can inundate
urban areas that are nearby the eruption.
During the Mt. St. Helens eruption 2.3 km3 of debris slid
down the mountain at speeds up to 240 km/hr.
Due to ash and gas that may spend years in the upper
atmosphere; reduces incoming solar radiation.
In the immediate vicinity of the volcano ash deposits reach 600 metres in
thickness
Ash fall from the eruption covers an area of at least 4 million square km;
half the area of the continental United States.
This reduction had been estimated for approximately the time of Toba’s
eruption on the basis of genetic studies and is termed the “human
population bottleneck”.
Yellowstone Caldera
The caldera is 80 km
long and 50 km wide.
The caldera and its magma chamber are due to a hot spot in the mantle
that has moved several hundred kilometres over the past 12.5 million
years.
The movement is due to the drift of the north American continent over
the hot spot.
Ancient, inactive
calderas mark the path
of the hot spot.
The current caldera was formed with an eruption 640,000 years ago (the
Lava Creek Eruption).
A smaller eruption
happened 1.3 million
years ago, releasing
280 km3 of debris.
Eruptions appear to have a 600,000 year period (that long between
eruptions) so we’re overdue for another one.
Previous eruptions spread ash over thousands of km2 across the US.
Heightened monitoring of the Yellowstone Caldera in recent years has
led to media concern of an impending eruption.
If such an eruption were to take place, North America and the rest of the
world could experience another “Dark Ages”.