Volcanoes. 11/25/2013. Geology 15 Lecture 27 VOLCANO!

Similar documents
Volcanoes. Table of Contents Volcanoes and Plate Tectonics Volcanic Eruptions Volcanic Landforms

3.2 Notes: Volcanoes Form as Molten Rock Erupts

Foundations of Earth Science, 6e Lutgens, Tarbuck, & Tasa

Erupted and killed approximately 15,000 people 200 years ago

Part A GEOLOGY 12 CHAPTER 4 WORKSHEET VOLCANOES. Name

A bowl shaped depression formed by the collapse of a volcano is called a. Magma that has left the vent of a volcano is known as. Lava.

Volcanoes. Volcanic eruptions can be more powerful than the explosion of an atomic bomb.

GEOL1 Physical Geology Laboratory Manual College of the Redwoods Lesson Five: Volcanoes Background Reading: Volcanoes Volcanic Terms: Silca:

2/25/2013. Volcanoes: summary in haiku form A volcano forms. Magma comes to the surface - explodes, if felsic.

Volcano - A Volcano is an opening in the Earth s surface through which molten material or volcanic gases are erupted.

GEOLOGY MEDIA SUITE Chapter 12

V o l c a n o es. Part I Composition. Types of deposits. Types of volcanoes Distribution

! Profile of Mauna Loa in Hawaii. Mauna Loa is one of five huge shield volcanoes that make up the island of Hawaii.

Types of Volcanoes KEY CONCEPT: TECTONIC PLATE MOTIONS CAN RESULT IN VOLCANIC ACTIVITY AT PLATE BOUNDARIES.

Visualizing Earth Science. Chapter Overview. Volcanoes and Eruption Types. By Z. Merali and B. F. Skinner. Chapter 9 Volcanism and Other

1/31/2013 BASALTIC BASALTIC ANDESITIC RHYOLITIC

WHAT IS A MAGMA. Magma is a mixture of molten rock, volatiles and solids that is found beneath the surface of the Earth.

Magma vs. Lava. Molten rock below Earth s surface is called magma. The magma that reaches the surface and erupts out of a volcano is called lava.

Clough Award 2017 Katmai and the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes

Types of Volcanoes. Key Concept: Tectonic plate motions can result in volcanic activity at plate boundaries.

Vulcanicity. Objectives to identify the basic structure of volcanoes and understand how they form.

Chapter 18. Volcanism

Chapter 5 9/10/2011. Introduction. Volcanoes and Volcanism. Volcanism. Introduction. Introduction. Introduction

What mainly controls eruptive style?

REFERENCE: The Blue Planet An Introduction to Earth System Science. Brian J. Skinner and Barbara W. Murck (2011) Third Edition. John Wiley and Sons

LECTURE #11: Volcanic Disasters: Lava Properties & Eruption Types

A. What is a volcano?

Unit 4 Lesson 4 Volcanoes. Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Mt St Helens was know to have entered into active periods that lasted from years once every years over the last 500 years, (Figure 5).

Volcanoes. Environmental Geology, Mr. Paul Lowrey Stacey Singleton, Cassandra Combs, Dwight Stephenson, Matt Smithyman

Volcano an opening in Earth s crust through which molten rock, gases, and ash erupt and the landform that develops around this opening.

Part I. Mt. St. Helens

OIKOS > volcano > mechanism >types of volcanoes

Study Guide: Unit 1. 1) Take careful notes in class during the lectures as well as the information given in the slides presented during class

From Punchbowl to Panum: Long Valley Volcanism and the Mono-Inyo Crater Chain

Overview of Ch. 4. I. The nature of volcanic eruptions 9/19/2011. Volcanoes and Other Igneous Activity Chapter 4 or 5

Convergent Plate Boundary Geologic Features

Introduction to volcanoes. Volcano: an opening in the earth s surface through which lava, hot gases, and rock fragments erupt

ESC1000 Earth Science Summer 2016

Apr 20 2:26 PM. the opening in Earth's crust through which molten rock, gases, and ash erupt. the landform that develops around this opening

The Nature of Igneous Rocks

When Mount St. Helens erupted, trapped gases caused the north side of the mountain to explode. Volcanic ash was ejected high into the atmosphere.

Study guide chapter 9

Chapter 7: Volcanoes 8/18/2014. Section 1 (Volcanoes and Plate Tectonics) 8 th Grade. Ring of Fire

GY 111: Physical Geology

GLG Ch 6: Volcanoes & Volcanic Hazards. 3. Name, describe (DSC) and draw the three types of volcanoes from smallest to largest.

Chapter 5 The Wrath of Vulcan: Volcanic Eruptions

Volcanism. Dr. Dan Britt Department of Physics

Volcanism Activity. Choose one of the options below to complete for tomorrow. You may work with a partner on this activity. Be creative and realistic!

Volcano. Magma. Lava. weak spot in crust where magma and gases come up. molten mixture of rockforming

Pyroclastic Flows. Lesson 6

3/24/2016. Geology 12 Mr. M. Gauthier 24 March 2016

Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Volcano: a weak spot in the crust where molten material or magma comes to the surface

Directed Reading. Section: Volcanic Eruptions

Engineering Geology ECIV 2204

UGRC 144 Science and Technology in Our Lives/Geohazards

Magma. Objectives. Describe factors that affect the formation of magma. Compare and contrast the different types of magma. Vocabulary.

Earthquakes and Volcanoes

Goal 2.1 Forces in the Lithosphere. Volcanic Activity

Physical Geology, 15/e

GEOL 10: Environmental Geology Activity 9: Topographic Maps and Mt. St. Helens. Name: Date:

M 7.2 Earthquake along Iraq Iran border Sunday, November 12, Close to boundary of the Arabian and Eurasian Plates

IGNEOUS ROCKS AND IGNEOUS ACTIVITY

Magma. Objectives. Describe factors that affect the formation of magma. Compare and contrast the different types of magma. Vocabulary.

A New College in Orting?

3/7/17. #16 - Case Studies of Volcanoes II. Announcements Monday 2/27

Volcanoes. Presented by Kesler Science

Homework III. Volcanological Exercises

A Volcano is An opening in Earth s crust through

Chapter 5 Volcanoes The Nature of Volcanic Eruptions The Nature of Volcanic Eruptions The Nature of Volcanic Eruptions

Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE

Living in the shadow of Italy's volcanoes

Geology 101. Reading Guide for Chapters 1, 4, and 5

Debris Avalanches. Debris avalanche deposits on a volcano in Chile. All of the area in the foreground is buried by a thick debris avalanche.

IGNEOUS ROCKS AND IGNEOUS ACTIVITY

Introduction to Earth s s Spheres The Benchmark

Dynamic Planet PUT ALL YOUR ANSWERS ON THE ANSWER SHEET. c) low temperature d) high volatile content

GEOLOGY 285: INTRO. PETROLOGY

Objectives: Describe how volcanoes can affect people. Describe conditions that cause volcanoes. Describe the relationship between volcanoes and Earth

Imagine the first rock and the cycles that it has been through.

Directed Reading. Section: Volcanic Eruptions. light in color is called a. felsic. b. oceanic. c. mantle. d. mafic. dark in color is called

Surname 1. Name: Instructor s Name: Course Number: Date: Geological Significance

Fire and Ice. Overview. Grade Level 6 8. Students will be able to: Objectives

Chapter 5 Lecture. Earth: An Introduction to Physical Geology. Twelfth Edition. Volcanic Hazards. Tarbuck and Lutgens Pearson Education, Inc.

Effects of Eruptions. Most active in the world Kilauea, Hawaii.

Geology of the Hawaiian Islands

Volcano Unit Pre Assessment. Match the type of volcano to the correct picture by drawing a line to connect the two.

Igneous Rocks. Magma molten rock material consisting of liquid rock and crystals. A variety exists, but here are the end members:

History of the Long Valley Caldera Abstract The history of the Long Valley Caldera is an active one that began 280 ma years before

1 Types of Volcanoes CHAPTER. Chapter 1. Types of Volcanoes

VOLCANOES. Homework due Wed./Thurs. I have a few copies left, or get by moodle or webpage

Study Guide: Unit 3. Density and Pressure: You should be able to answer the types of questions given in the end of module questions.

Calc-alkaline Volcanic Rocks. Calc-alkali Volcanics. Fabric. Petrography. Compositional Classification. Petrography. Processes.

Welcome back. During last lecture, we were talking about eruption which took place along St Mount Helens so that during 1980.

Hawaiian Islands. Lesson 13

GLY 155 Introduction to Physical Geology, W. Altermann

What is plate tectonics?

Chapter 18 - Volcanic Activity. Aka Volcano Under the City

Volcanoes. I Types of Volcanoes II Plutonic Activity III Plate Tectonics and Igneous Activity IV Magma and Lava V Types of Lava Flows

Transcription:

Hazard Update Surprise POP Review Tsunami Activity 10 B Today s Material Volcanoes Volcanic Hazards Geology 15 Lecture 27 VOLCANO! http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/watch an erupting volcano create a newisland off the coast of japan http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/ Today s Material Volcanoes Volcanic Hazards Opera set for the eruption of Vesuvius from Pacini s The Last Day of Pompeii, about 1827 32, Carlo Sanquirico after Alessandro Sanquirico. The Getty Research Institute Lava mapped in 17 th and 18 th centuries http://thegetty.tumblr.com/post/31429806008/opera set for the eruption of vesuvius from http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/pompeii/index.html http://www.old map blog.com/wp content/uploads/2010/01/vesuv_mount_vesuvius.jpg 1

This Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) image of Mt. Vesuvius, Italy was acquired September 26, 2000. The false color image covers an area of 36 by 45 km. Vesuvius overlooks the city of Naples and the Bay of Naples in central Italy. (Popocatepetl and Mount Fuji are other volcanos surrounded by dense urban areas.) In 79 AD, Vesuvius erupted cataclysmically, burying all of the surrounding cites with up to 30 m of ash. The towns of Pompeii and Herculanaeum were rediscovered in the 18th century, and excavated in the 20th century. They provide a snapshot of Roman life from 2000 years ago: perfectly preserved are wooden objects, food items, and the casts of hundreds of victims. Vesuvius is intensively monitored for potential signs of unrest that could signal the beginning of another eruption. http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/iotd/view.php?id=1045 http://artnc.org/works of art/eruption mt vesuvius Herculaneum AD 79. A large number of people were sheltering in this seaside boathouse. The ancient Roman town was destroyed by the same Mt. Vesuvius eruption that took out Pompeii. Pierre Jacques Volaire The Eruption of Mt. Vesuvius 1777 https://www.pinterest.com/pin/470978073501952619/ 2

Herculaneum http://www.roughguides.com/article/bucket list/ http://earth.rice.edu/mtpe/geo/geosphere/hot/volcanoes/volcanoes_b2.html http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~dylan/mtpe/geosphere/wh/vol/volcanoes.html Hot Spots Rifts Subduction Zones http://pubs.usgs.gov/imap/2800/ World Map of Volcanoes, Earthquakes, Impact Craters, and Plate Tectonics 3

CASCADES VOLCANO! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=forp1n1xwye&list=tlirzlzr8acbsqdin3pn4jnguh GEfk2p2 http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~dylan/mtpe/geosphere/wh/vol/volcanoes.html 4

http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~dylan/mtpe/geosphere/wh/vol/volcanoes.html http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/vsc/images/image_mngr/900 999/img932.jpg http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/glossary/volcanotypes/volcano_types.html http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/glossary/volcanotypes/volcano_types_quick_r eference.html http://bc.outcrop.org/images/rocks/igneous/press4e/figure 05 03.jpg 5

http://bc.outcrop.org/images/rocks/rocksmadeofminerals.jpg http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/images/pglossary/volrocks.php http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/images/pglossary/basalt.php Basalt is a hard, black volcanic rock with less than about 52 weight percent silica (SiO 2 ). Because of basalt's low silica content, it has a low viscosity (resistance to flow). Therefore, basaltic lava can flow quickly and easily move >20 km from a vent. The low viscosity typically allows volcanic gases to escape without generating enormous eruption columns. Basaltic lava fountains and fissure eruptions, however, still form explosive fountains hundreds of meters tall. 6

http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/images/pglossary/andesite.php http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/images/pglossary/dacite.php Andesite is a gray to black volcanic rock with between about 52 and 63 weight percent silica (SiO 2 ). Andesite magma commonly erupts from stratovolcanoes as thick lava flows, some reaching several km in length. Andesite magma can also generate strong explosive eruptions to form pyroclastic flows and surges and enormous eruption columns. Andesites erupt at temperatures between 900 and 1100 C. Dacite lava is most often light gray, but can be dark gray to black. Dacite lava consists of about 63 to 68 percent silica (SiO2). It is one of the most common rock types associated with enormous Plinian style eruptions. When relatively gas poor dacite erupts onto a volcano's surface, it typically forms thick rounded lava flow in the shape of a dome. http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/images/pglossary/rhyolite.php Rhyolite is a light colored rock with silica (SiO2) content greater than about 68 weight percent. Sodium and potassium oxides both can reach about 5 weight percent. Common mineral types include quartz, feldspar and biotite and are often found in a glassy matrix. Rhyolite is erupted at temperatures of 700 to 850 C. http://www.britannica.com/ebchecked/media/3256/ 7

http://www.nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/pdf/2012vol11 1/2 Fierstein APS V11 I1.pdf http://bc.outcrop.org/geol_b10/lecture7.html USGS VOLCANO! 8

Augustine Volcano in the Cook Inlet is a stratovolcano (or composite cone). This photograph was taken looking northwest; volcanic ash covers the upper flanks of the summit. White steam is being emitted. Aerial view of 80 m (260 ft) high Novarupta, a blocky rhyolite (high silica) lava dome that marks the vent for the 1912 eruption that created the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes in Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska. This eruption was the most voluminous on Earth in the 20th century, ejecting nearly 30 km 3 (7 mi 3 ) of material in 60 hours. Falling Mountain, a lava dome truncated by the 1912 eruption, is visible behind the Novarupta dome; snow capped stratovolcano Mount Mageik can be seen at top of the photograph. Aerial view, looking east, of Aniakchak caldera. Formed during a catastrophic ash flow producing eruption about 3,400 years ago, Aniakchak caldera is about 10 km (6 mi) across and averages 500 m (1,640 ft) in depth. Voluminous post caldera eruptive activity has produced a wide variety of volcanic landforms and deposits within the caldera. The volcano is located in Aniakchak National Park and Preserve on the Alaska Peninsula. Mount Wrangell, a 4,317 m (14,163 ft) high andesite shield volcano on the right skyline, is the only volcano in the Wrangell Mountains with documented historical activity consisting of several minor, possibly phreatic eruptions in the early 1900s. At left is Mount Zanetti, a 3,965 m (13,009 ft) high cone. View is to the northeast. 9

Pyroclastic flow (deposits of volcanic ash, gas, and pumice flows) deposits on the southwestern flank of Augustine Volcano, Cook Inlet, Alaska. Fumarolic activity at the summit of Fourpeaked Volcano in Kamtai National Park and Preserve on the Alaska Peninsula View southeast up the Valley of Ten Thousand Smoke from the Overlook Cabin in Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska. The valley has been filled with up to 200 m (660 ft) of pyroclastic flow deposits (ignimbrite) from the 1912 eruption of Novarupta volcano. The rim of Katmai Caldera is on the skyline at left. http://www.nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/pdf/2012vol11 1/2 Fierstein APS V11 I1.pdf http://www.nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/pdf/2012vol11 1/2 Fierstein APS V11 I1.pdf 10

Watch Out for Those BOMBS Lassen Peak viewed from the south at the summit of Brokeoff Volcano 11

Bumpass Hell, a hydrothermal area in Lassen Volcanic Park. The pools contain hot water that bubble and steam. Measuring and Monitoring the VOLCANO! Volcanic Explosivity Index http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/imag es/pglossary/vei.php Volcanic Hazard Mt. Lassen 12

Volcanic Hazard Crater Lake Volcanic Hazard Mt. St. Helens 13