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Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up
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Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up

Page 2: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

A volcano is:

• An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape

Page 3: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Volcano Features:

• Dome: build up of lava and debris surrounding a vent to form a volcano

• Vent: the opening in the earth that volcanic materials get erupted from

Page 4: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Things that can come out of a volcano:• Lava: molten rock, ability to flow depends on

Silica and moisture content (called magma when found inside the earth), made up of crystals volcanic glass, and bubbles

• Ash: rock, mineral, volcanic glass (all pieces ejected are around the size of a pinhead)

• Tephra: fragments exploded from a volcano (bomb, block, lapilli, ash, cinder)

Page 5: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

• Lahar: fast moving mix of rock pieces and water, like a fast moving river of muddy rock

• Gas: CO2, H2Ovapor, SO2

• Pyroclastic Flow: avalanche of hot volcanic materials, travel very quickly

Page 6: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.
Page 7: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

People tend to live near volcanoes because:

• They have very fertile soils• Contain valuable mineral deposits• Are very scenic• Tourism

Page 8: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Bad things volcanoes can do to the environment:

• Destroy the land• Kill plants, animals, and people• Put deadly gases

into the air (short term)• Provide about 3%

of yearly CO2 output

Page 9: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Viscosity is:

• The ability of a material to resist flow.

Page 10: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

How does viscosity effect an eruption?

• The more viscous the lava, the more explosive the eruption.

• More viscous materials flow very slowly so they ‘jam up’ the volcano vent until there’s too much pressure and they explode.

Page 11: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Stratovolcano

• Lava viscosity=High• Gases: high which leads to explosive eruptions• Size: medium • Eruption Style: alternates eruptions of lava

flows and pyroclastic flows/explosions• Found: subduction zones• Examples: Mt Fuji, Mt St Helens,

Krakatoa

Page 13: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Cinder Cone• Lava viscosity=Highest• Gases: high, gas charged lava carries lava up in lava

fountains• Size: smaller with narrow piles of pyroclastic

particles• Eruption Style: explodes vertically with small

cinders forming and falling straight back down• Found: typically found on sides of other volcanoes• Examples: Paricutin, Wizard Island

Page 15: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Shield Volcano• Lava viscosity=Low• Gases: low• Size: largest , big base with gently sloping

sides• Eruption Style: fluid flow from all directions

around vent• Found: Hotspots• Examples: Hawaii,

Galapagos, Iceland

Page 17: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

Hotspots are:

• Areas of volcanism not at plate boundaries.• Magma finds a weak spot in the earth’s crust

and forces it’s way up to the surface.• Ex: Hawaii, Yellowstone

Page 18: Volcano WebQuest Follow-Up. A volcano is: An opening in the earth’s crust that allows magma, pyroclasts, and gases to escape.

How was Hawaii formed?• The Pacific Plate is moving Northwest over the

stationary hotspot that supplies magma to the Hawaiian volcanoes.

• As a result, an island chain formed with the oldest volcano being the furthest NW and the youngest (and still activeone) being the furthest

south.