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Eruptions
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Making Magma Activity depends on composition of magma
Lava can be thin & runny or thick & lumpy
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Magma Temperature Most rocks melt between 800-1200 °C
In Crust & Upper Mantle Pressure Increase with depth because of weight of rocks High pressure increases melting temperature
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Composition of Magma Amount of Gas & Silica
Increase gas dissolved = increased explosiveness Dissolved gases = carbon dioxide, water vapor, sulfur oxide, sulfuric acid Water vapor determines where magma forms Water vapor decreases melting temperature
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Composition Viscosity = Resistance to flow
Temperature & silica content affect viscosity High viscosity = cool magma High silica = thick & sticky Traps gases, produces explosive eruptions Low silica = thin & runny Flow easily, produce quiet, non-explosive eruptions
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Types of Magma - Basaltic
Less then 50% silica content Low-viscosity magma Gas easily escapes Quiet eruptions Ex: Kilauea & Mauna Loa
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Types of Magma - Andesitic
50-60% silica content Oceanic-continental subduction zones Intermediate viscosity Intermediate explosiveness Send high volumes of ash & debris Ex: Colima Volcano in Mexico
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Types of Magma - Rhyolitic
More than 60% silica content Magma mixes with water and silica High viscosity Large volumes of gas trapped Very explosive
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Explosive Eruptions If lava is too viscous to flow, pressure builds up until an explosion Tephra = pieces of solidified lava or pieces of crust Classified by size Ash = smallest tephra, diameter is less then 2 mm Blocks = largest tephra
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Ash Can rise into atmosphere
Tiny sulfuric acid droplets remain in stratosphere and block sun’s rays and decrease global temperature
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Pyroclastic Flows Tephra + gases VERY HOT
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In-Class Assignment 18.2 Study Guide WKT
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