What is a volcano? DEFINITION - A volcano is an opening in Earth that erupts gases, ash, and lava. Volcanic mountains form when layers of lava, ash, and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Types of Volcanoes Chapter 11 Section 2.
Advertisements

Eruptions and Forms of Volcanoes
Volcanoes.
What Controls Volcanic Eruptions?
A Volcano Primer By Mrs. Baker
Volcano Types (39) Volcanoes are either explosive of non explosive.
Section HOLY SMOKES-IT’S A VOLCANO!
Finish the test and photocopy Finish the study guide and photocopy BrainPop photocopies Final Project Copies Finish Grading You need to go over the Japan.
Place these notes in your Notebook.
Chapter 9 Volcanoes. 9.1 What causes volcanoes? Volcano: an opening in the Earth’s surface which forms a mountain when layers of ash & lava build up.
Chapter 10 Volcanoes.
1 Volcanoes. 2 Different Volcanic Settings 3 Types of Eruptions Eruptions will generally be of two types: Quiet (Rift) eruptions Explosive (Subduction)
Earth Science Notes Volcano Types
Volcano Explosions and Types. What causes different types of explosions? Trapped gases: Trapped gases: – Water vapor and carbon dioxide can be trapped.
What are the three types of volcanoes and what type of eruptions does each volcano have?
Volcanoes.
Volcanoes Chapter 12.
Two factors determine the type of eruption :  Amount of water vapor & other gases in the magma  The chemical composition of the magma Types of Volcanic.
Volcanoes: The Eruptions, The Lava, and The Types
Volcanoes 11.1 What Causes Volcanoes?.
What is a volcano? DEFINITION - A volcano is an opening in Earth that erupts gases, ash, and lava. Volcanic mountains form when layers of lava, ash, and.
Warm-up What is your favorite holiday tradition?.
1. 5.Volcanoes 2 3 When the plates of Earth collide, sometimes a volcano is formed Vocabulary volcano When the material from the mantle erupts onto the.
Section 6.1 Vocabulary to know: Volcano Quiet eruptions Explosive eruptions Crater Central vent Dike Lava Pipe Magma chamber Magma Aa Pahoehoe Pillow lava.
Volcanoes and Eruptions
Holy Smokes! A Volcano Primer By Mrs. Baker. What is a volcano? A volcano is an opening in Earth that erupts gases, ash, and lava. Volcanic mountains.
1 Volcanoes Volcano Cam. 2 Different Volcanic Settings.
“Volcanoes” What is a Volcano?
Ch 12 Volcanos.
Chapter TWELEVE Volcanoes.
Volcanoes and Eruptions
 More than 600 active volcanoes on Earth  Kilauea in Hawaii erupts continuously.  Iceland is a country that is made entirely from volcanoes.
V OLCANOES Chapter 11 Section V OLCANO The place where magma reaches the Earth’s surface.
Volcanoes.
EARTH SCIENCE Mrs. Baker cjcb2015
Chapter 12 Volcanoes. An opening in the Earth that erupts gases, ash, and lava Volcanic mountains form when layers of lava, ash, and other materials build.
Volcanoes.
A Volcano Primer By Mrs. Baker Edited and added to by Mrs. Fowler 2015
18.1 Magma VOLCANIC ACTIVITY.
Chapter 12: Volcanoes!. Volcanoes and Earth's Moving Plates A volcano is an opening in Earth that erupts gases, ash and lava. Volcanic mountains form.
Volcanoes and Earth’s Moving Parts
Chapter 12 Section 2 Types of Volcanoes. What Controls eruptions Two factors control the type of eruption. 1. Amount of water vapor and other gases. 2.
Chapter 15. Where do Volcanoes Occur Divergent Boundaries Convergent Boundaries Hoy Spots Subduction boundaries.
Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and Tsunamis. Earthquakes Fault: a break in the Earth’s crust. Blocks of the crust slide past each other along fault lines. When.
Chapter 12 Volcanoes Chapter 12 Volcanoes Section 1: Volcanoes and Earth’s Moving Plates Volcanoes.
Volcanoes and You. 1. What is a volcano? A volcano is a mountain that forms when layers of lava and volcanic ash erupt and build up around a vent.
Warm Up # 13 What is being shown in the picture on the left? What is being shown in the picture on the right? How do they relate to each other?
Volcanoes Chapter 6. What are volcanoes? They are openings in the Earth that erupt gases, ash, and lava.
Section 10-3 Explain the 2 factors that determine whether a volcanic eruption will be explosive or quiet. Describe the 3 basic forms that a volcano can.
Volcanoes: The Fire Within Chapter 9: Volcanoes. What is a Volcano? A vent that lets out heat from inside the Earth, spewing out lava and eventually forming.
Three Types of Volcanoes
Volcanoes!!.
Ch.12 - Volcanoes Earth Science.
Eruptions and Forms of Volcanoes
Volcanoes!!.
Section HOLY SMOKES-IT’S A VOLCANO!
The Nature of Volcanic Eruptions
Three Types of Volcanoes
Volcanoes Ch. 9.
A Volcano Primer By Mrs. Baker
Goal 10 - Holy Smokes! A Volcano Primer.
Chapter 12 Volcanoes.
Place these notes in your Notebook.
Volcanoes.
Do now How are volcanoes and earthquakes related?
Volcano Classification
Take out homework and Work on homework
Chapter 12 Volcanoes.
Volcanoes and You.
Continuation of earth’s process part 2
Presentation transcript:

What is a volcano? DEFINITION - A volcano is an opening in Earth that erupts gases, ash, and lava. Volcanic mountains form when layers of lava, ash, and other material build up around these openings.

3 Basic Volcano shapes Cinder Cone Shield Composite Cone What information do these shapes give scientists? tells us something about how the volcano was formed. Cinder Cone Shield Composite Cone

1. Cinder Cone Volcano Composed of: Tephra (volcanic cinders, bit of solidified lava, and bits of rocks) ERUPTION – Violent, tephra is thrown into the air during an eruption & then fall back down around the vent DIAGRAM - forming a steep-sided loosely packed volcano.

Example Cinder Cone Volcano Parícutin Volcano in Mexico is a great example of a cinder cone volcano.

Paracútin On February 20, 1943, a Mexican farmer noticed that a hole in his cornfield that had been there for as long as he could remember was giving off smoke. Throughout the night, hot glowing cinders were thrown high into the air. In just a few days, a cinder cone several hundred meters high covered his cornfield.

2. Shield Volcano Composed of: basaltic lava Diagram: a broad volcano with gently sloping sides. ERUPTION: Quiet

Shield Volcano The shapes of these volcanoes reflect the fact that they are constructed of lava flows that erupted non-explosively. It is usually many times larger than a composite cone or cinder cone volcano. Mauna Kea volcano picture from www.usgs.gov

Example of Shield Volcano Mt. Kilauea Probably one of the world’s most active volcanoes. The eruption of Kilauea Volcano that began in 1983 continues at the cinder-and-spatter cone of Pu`u `O`o IN HAWAII Mt. Kilauea Picture from http://www.britannica.com/eb/art-89176/Hawaiis-Kilauea-is-an-active-volcano

3. Composite Volcano Composed of: explosively erupted pyroclastic materials layered with lava flows and volcanic debris. DIAGRAM: not too steep and not too broad, in between ERUPTION: Explosive and quiet An explosive period can release gas and ash, forming a tephra layer. Then, the eruption can switch to a quieter period, erupting lava over the top of the tephra layer.

Example of Composite Volcano Mount St. Helen’s In Washington State Erupted in 1980 57 fatalities Over 7000 big game animals perished 4 billion board feet of timber (enough to build about 300,000 two-bedroom homes) destroyed Destroyed 27 bridges, nearly 200 homes. Blast and lahars destroyed more than 185 miles of highways and roads and 15 miles of railways.

SECOND Example of Composite Volcano Mount Pinatubo In Phillipines Erupted in 1991 Killed 847 people 184 people injured 10, 000 home destroyed and another 5,000 were damaged. The ash cloud took one year to spread around the globe, reducing global temperatures. This resulted in Floods in 1993 along the Mississippi River Drought in Africa in 1993 The US had its 3rd wettest & coldest winter on record.

THIRD Example of Composite Volcano Krakatau in Indonesia One of the most violent eruptions in recent times occurred on an island in the Sunda Straits near Indonesia in August of 1883. Krakatau, a volcano on the island, erupted with such force that the island disappeared.

Example of Composite Volcano Krakatau Killed 36,000 people most were killed by a giant tsunami Destroyed 160 villages Fine ashes from the eruption were carried by upper level winds as far away as New York City Volcanic dust lowered global temperatures for five years, this caused

Example of Composite Volcano Krakatau Unusual sunsets and weather patterns for three years Evidence: William Ashcroft’s paintings The Scream

What determines how explosive an eruption is? Amount of trapped gases Amount of Water Vapor Composition of Magma

1. Trapped Gases EXPLANATION: Gases such as water vapor and carbon dioxide are trapped in magma by the pressure of the surrounding magma and rock. QUIET ERUPTION: Gas escapes easily from some magma EXPLOSIVE ERUPTION: Gas that builds up to high pressures eventually causes explosive eruptions.

2. Amount of Water Vapor EXPLANATION: Magma at some convergent plate boundaries contains a lot of water vapor. The oceanic plate material and some of its water slide under other plate material at some convergent plate boundaries. The more water vapor, the bigger the explosion QUIET ERUPTION: Not a lot of water vapor EXPLOSIVE ERUPTION: A lot of water vapor

3. Magma Composition The composition (what it is made of) determines how explosive a volcano will be.

Magma Composition Basaltic DESCRIPTION: very fluid, allowing trapped gases to escape easily. ERUPTION: quiet, non-explosive eruptions.

Magma Composition Basaltic If the same lava flows at a lower temperature, a stiff, slowly moving aa (AH-ah) lava forms. As pahoehoe (pa-HOY-hoy) lava cools, it forms a ropelike structure. rock structures shaped like tubes, balloons, or pillows. Volcanoes with basaltic lava produce: underwater pillow lava formations

Magma Composition Basaltic Examples You can find volcanoes with basaltic lava Hawaiian Volcanoes, including Kilauea Mona Loa Iceland Heimaey Hekla

Magma Composition Granitic Lava DESCRIPTION: Silica-rich ERUPTION: explosive Silica-rich granitic magma is thick, and gas gets trapped inside, causing pressure to build up.

Magma Composition Granitic Lava “If it had erupted in a populated area…"The magnitude of the eruption can perhaps be best realized if one could imagine a similar outburst centered in New York City. All of Greater New York would be buried under from ten to fifteen feet of ash; Philadelphia would be covered by a foot of gray ash and would be in total darkness for sixty hours; Washington and Buffalo would receive a quarter of an inch of ash, with a shorter period of darkness. The sound of the explosion would be heard in Atlanta and St. Louis, and the fumes noticed as far away as Denver, San Antonio, and Jamaica." Some examples of granitic volcanoes are Yellowstone Caldera It is a super voclano! Katmai, Alaska Last eruted in 1912.

Magma Composition Andesitic Lava DESCRIPTION: forms at convergent plate boundaries where one plate slides under the other. ERUPTION: violent, explosive eruptions.

Magma Composition Andesitic Lava The word andesitic comes from the Andes, which are mountains located along the western edge of South America, where andesite rock is common. Many of the volcanoes encircling the Pacific Ocean also are made of andesite.

Magma Composition Andesitic Lava Mount Pelee, Martinique Famous for the May 8, 1902 eruption which killed 29,000 people and destroyed the city of St. Pierre. This is the largest number of causalities for a volcanic eruption this century. Mayon, Phillipines It is the most active volcano in the Philippines. Since 1616, Mayon has erupted 47 times. It’s 1814 eruption killed 1,600.

Volcanoes in a nutshell Three volcano types Shape Cinder Violent eruptions Composite Violent & quiet eruptions Shield Quiet Eruptions

Volcanoes in a nutshell Three factors affect how violent an eruption will be Water Vapor More water vapor = bigger explosion Trapped Gasses How easily the gas escapes determines how violent the explosion Easy escape = quiet eruption Difficult to escape = explosive eruption Magma Type Basaltic Magma = quiet explosion Granitic/Andesitic = violent eruptions