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Vo s

lc e
a no Composition

Types of deposits

Types of volcanoes
Distribution
Prediction
Impact of eruptions
Supervolcanoes
Volcano: A mound of material that is extruded to the
Earth’s surface from a vent that is connected to a magma
chamber via a feeder conduit.
Volcanoes are classified according to their form.

The form of a volcanoes depends on the type of material


that it is made up of.

The nature of the extruded material (and the volcano


itself) depends on the properties of the magma.

Magma: Molten rock within the Earth.

Magma is called lava when it reaches the surface.


The composition of magma determines the type of rock
that forms when it cools and its behavior during an
eruption.
Main controls on behavior:
chemical composition (largely silica dioxide - SiO2 -
content)
and
gas content (largely water vapor and CO2).

SiO2 content controls the viscosity of a magma.

Viscosity: a measure of how easily a fluid flows. Water has


a low viscosity, molasses has a much higher viscosity.
Viscosity, in turn, controls the amount of gas that can be
trapped in the magma.

The greater the viscosity the more gas in the magma.

There are three basic types of magma:

Basaltic Magma

Andesitic Magma

Rhyolitic Magma
The names are based on the rock type that forms when the
magma crystallizes.
Magma Chemical Temperature Viscosity Gas
Type Composition (degrees C) Content

Basaltic 45-55% SiO2; 1000 - 1200 Low Low


High in Fe,
Mg, Ca; Low in
K, Na.
Andesitic 55-65% SiO2; 800-1000 Intermediate Intermediate
Intermediate
Fe, Mg, Ca,
Na, K
Rhyolitic 65-75% SiO2; 650-800 High High
Low in Fe, Mg,
Ca; High in K,
Na
Overall, the behaviour of the magma determines the type
of volcano that develops:

Low SiO2 magmas, with little gas and low viscosity, flows
readily through their vents and across the land surface
when the lava escapes the vents.

High SiO2 magmas, gaseous and with high viscosity, tend


to plug their vents until the force of escaping magma blows
the vent clear; such magmas cause explosive volcanoes.
Types of volcanic deposits
(photos from USGS)

Volcanoes also vary in terms of the types of deposits that


they produce.

Lava: Hot (up to 1200 degrees C), fluid,molten rock


that flows along the land surface.
Lava can flow like viscous water, including forming lava
falls.
Pahoehoe: Lava with a ropelike surface texture due to
partial cooling as the lava flowed. Relatively hot, low
viscosity lava.
Pahoehoe
A thick deposit of pahoehoe lava
Aa: Blocky, rough lava flow. Due to high viscosity lava
that flowed pushing chunks of solid and semi-solid
blocks.
Lava tube: A tube
formed by cooling and
solidifying of the lava
walls while fluid lava
continued to flow inside.
Pillows: A form of closed lava tube (with a bulbous
end) that forms when a lava flows into water (e.g., a
lake or ocean) and cools very rapidly.

http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/04fire/background/volcanism/media/pillow_lava_video.html

Pyroclastic material: Debris formed by a volcanic


explosion. Results when magma is very viscous.
Tephra: The general term for all pyroclastic material
that is ejected from a volcano. Different terms apply
according to the size of the tephra. (syn. Ejecta)
Ash: tephra that is finer than 2 mm in diameter.
Lapilli: from 2 mm to 64 mm in diameter.

Blocks: hard fragments greater


than 64 mm in diameter.
Bombs: soft, partially melted fragments greater than
64 mm in diameter.
Tuff: A deposit made up of ash.
Welded tuff: A deposit of pyroclastic material that was
laid down while still very hot and particles become
fused together.
Ash fall: Fallout of very fine ash from the air.
Volcanic ash fall during
mid-day with the
eruption of Mount
Pinatubo in the
Philippines.
Ash flow: Pyroclastic debris that flows downslope.

Lahar: A water saturated slurry of ash and other


volcanic debris that flows downslope.
Nuée Ardente (glowing cloud): A hot, gaseous cloud of
ash that flows down slope.

Flow speeds can reach 160


km/hr and temperatures can
exceed 600 degrees C.

http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/volc_images/img_mt_pelee.html
Classification of volcanoes

Volcanoes are classified according to their morphology.

The processes and deposits dictate the morphology of


volcanoes.

Three types of volcano:


Shield volcanoes: dominated by lava flows.

Muana Loa Volcano – the world’s largest volcano.

http://hvo.wr.usgs.gov/maunaloa/ Photograph by J.D. Griggs on January 10, 1985


Cinder cones: dominated by pyroclastics.
Forms an isolated conical mound of tephra.

Photograph by J.P. Lockwood on 1 December 1975

http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/CinderCone.html
Stratovolcanoes: mixture of lavas and pyroclastics.
Syn. Composite volcanoes
Mount Mageik volcano, Alaska

Photograph by R. McGimsey on 15 July 1990

http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/stratovolcano.html
Shield Volcanoes

Dominated by fluid, high temperature, low viscosity


basaltic magma.
Low, dome-shaped profile, like an inverted shield.

http://geoimages.berkeley.edu/GeoImages/Johnson/Landforms/Volcanism/ShieldVolcano.html
Typical slopes approximately 15 degrees.

Lava flows downslope, away from a central vent or a series


of vents.

Many shield volcanoes have a central caldera:

Calderas form after an


eruption when the surface
collapses.

Each caldera is located at


the site of a former
eruption.

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

Dominated by viscous, gaseous magmas

Relatively cool basaltic magmas or andesitic magmas


predominate.

Mount Edziza, British Columbia


Internally constructed entirely of layers of pyroclastic
deposits (blocks, bombs, lapilli).

Slopes are steep, at angle of repose.


Angle of repose: the natural maximum angle that a
pile of loose, unconsolidated material will form.
Typical angles: 30 to 40 degrees.

Range from several metres to over 300 m in height.

Commonly associated with old shield volcanoes with a


relatively cool, basaltic magma.
Stratovolcanoes
Volcanoes that alternate
between periods of lava flows
(constructive phase) and
periods of explosive eruptions
(destructive phase).

Commonly called “composite


volcanoes” because they are
made up of both lava and
pyroclastic deposits.

Steep slopes, at angle of


repose or greater.
© Noemi Emmelheinz 2001
May lay dormant for thousands of years.

On average, andesitic magmas with a high gas content.

Actually, a mix of basaltic and rhyolitic magmas in many


cases.

Gases add great pressure when the feeder conduit


becomes plugged, contributing to the explosive power.

Can grow to thousands of metres high during


constructive lava flow phases.

The constructive phase often ends with a destructive phase


– an explosive eruption.
Mt. St. Helens Before

Mt. St. Helens After


Extensive ash falls and ash flows are commonly
produced during explosive phases.
After an eruption a large caldera remains.
Crater Lake is a caldera that remains following an
explosive eruption 7,700 years ago.

The eruption was 42 times more powerful than Mt. St.


Helens.
The Distribution of volcanoes
The vast majority of volcanoes are located:
Parallel to oceanic trenches.
Along the oceanic ridge.
Over hot spots originating from the mantle.
Volcanoes along trenches

Examples: Japan, most Pacific Islands, Caribbean


Islands, west coast of North and South America.
2/3 of all volcanoes are along the Ring of Fire that
surrounds the Pacific Ocean.
Volcanoes result from magma rising off the melting
subducted plate.

The composition of the magma is andesitic (melted


basaltic crust plus sediment carried on the crust).
Magma is very gaseous,
particularly enriched with
water vapor.

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.

Potential for very explosive eruptions.


Mt. Fuji, Japan
A stratovolcano that has erupted 16 times since
781 AD.
The most recent eruption was in 1707-1708

0.8 cubic km of ash, blocks, and bombs were ejected


during that eruption.

(Greater than Mt. St.


Helens and there were
no fatalities).
Similar situation on the west coast of North and South
America.

Volcanoes formed by intrusion into the mountain


chains that result from compressive forces between
oceanic and continental crust.
Volcanoes in Canada?
There are many inactive volcanoes in the Canadian Rocky Mountains.

None are erupting at the present time.

At least three have erupted over the past several hundred years.

For a catalogue of Canadian Volcanoes go to…..

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.

Basaltic pillow lavas


dominate the
submerged volcanoes.
Shield volcanoes occur where volcanic activity extends
to the surface (e.g., Iceland).

Iceland is growing by volcanic expansion of the ridge.


Unlike Hawaiian volcanoes, Icelandic shield volcanoes deliver lava
through fissures rather than central vents.
Volcanism associated with rifting

Volcanism Associated with subduction


Volcanoes and Hot Spots

Hot Spot: a point on the crust immediately above a hot


plume within the mantle.

Heat from the mantle (and some magma) rises to the hot
spot.

Rising mantle
material
termed a
mantle plume.
Hot spots can occur beneath oceanic or continental
crust.

Mechanism first proposed by J. Tuzo Wilson (a


Canadian geophysicist) to illustrate that plates actually
move.
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

Just southeast of Hawaii is an undersea volcano known as


Loihi.
Until 1996 Loihi was thought to be
an inactive seamount.

It began erupting in 1996 and the eruptions


were preceded by a cluster of small
earthquakes indicating the movement of
magma.
The modern active island rests close to the hot spot
and its shield volcanoes are fed from the magma that
the hot spot generates.

http://www.biosbcc.net/ocean/marinesci/02ocean/hwgeo.htm
The Pacific plate is moving
towards the northwest.

The volcanic islands have


been successively “pushed
off” the hot spot by plate
movement.
As the crust moves it
ages, becomes cooler and
more dense, causing it to
subside.

The seamounts are old


islands that have subsided
to below sea level.
The seamounts represent even older islands that have
been pushed further from the hot spot.
Recent studies suggest that the Hawaiian Hot Spot has moved over
time.
Prediction of Volcanic Eruptions

Long Term Prediction


Identify volcanoes and the frequency and style of their
eruptions (a geological problem).

Establish probabilities of eruption, style and location for


individual volcanoes.

Establish the level of risk based on historic and geologic


record.

E.g., for individual volcanoes: determine most likely routes


for lahars, nuees ardentes, lava flows, etc., and avoid
construction in those areas.
Hazard zones have been distinguished around Mt. Shasta
based on topography and past experience with eruptions.

Zone 1: areas likely to be affected


Zone 1 most frequently. Most future flows
from summit eruptions probably
would stay within this zone.
Hazard zones have been distinguished around Mt. Shasta
based on topography and past experience with eruptions.

Zone 1: areas likely to be affected


Zone 2 most frequently. Most future flows
from summit eruptions probably
would stay within this zone.

Zone 2: areas likely to be affected


by lava flows erupted from vents
on the flank of the volcano or that
move into zone 2 from zone 1.
Hazard zones have been distinguished around Mt. Shasta
based on topography and past experience with eruptions.

Zone 1: areas likely to be affected


Zone 3 most frequently. Most future flows
from summit eruptions probably
would stay within this zone.

Zone 2: areas likely to be affected


by lava flows erupted from vents
on the flank of the volcano or that
move into zone 2 from zone 1.
Zone 3: areas likely to be affected
infrequently and then only by long
lava flows that originate at vents in
zones 1 and 2
Short-term prediction

Based on the recognition of a pattern of events prior to


previous eruptions.

Gas emissions: rates of emission and type of gas changes in


some volcanoes.

Important gases include sulfur dioxide (SO2) and carbon


dioxide (CO2)

Changes in concentration may reflect movement of the


magma up the vent.
Surface tilting: recognition of changes in the land
surface due to building pressure in the conduit.
A surface bulge appeared on Mt. St. Helens prior to its
eruption.
April 8, 1980

April 26 May 2
Earthquakes: generated as the magma moves up the
feeder conduit to the vent.

When viscous magma becomes stuck in the conduit strain


energy builds as more magma tries to push out.

Movement takes place in a series of “jerks” as the rock


material breaks. Each “jerk” produces an earthquake.

Magnitudes generally less than 5 M.

The more earthquakes the further the magma has moved.


Mount Spurr, Alaska:
The 1992 Eruption of Crater Peak Vent

Black bars: earthquake


USGS frequency.

Red lines: volcanic eruptions.


A combination of approaches is likely the key to short-term prediction.
The impact of volcanic eruptions
Volcanic Hazards
Lava flows

Commonly destroy property in Hawaii and Iceland.

Damage limited to the vicinity in the immediate area of the


volcano.

Fatalities rare due to slow


speed of advancing lava
flow.
Ash fall
Extensive property damage and fatalities can result from
heavy ash falls.
Significant ash in the upper atmosphere can circle the
globe in a matter of weeks.
More than 80 commercial jets have been damaged by
flying through volcanic ash clouds.

Mt. St. Helens’


ash cloud
An ashfall 10 million years ago killed these rhinos that are preserved at
Ashfall Fossil Beds State Historic Park, Nebraska.

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.

Lahars can also dam rivers and which can lead to


extensive flooding.
Lahars can be the most devastating outcome of many
volcanoes.
A relatively small eruption of Nevada del Ruiz, Columbia,
in 1985, generated a lahar when the volcano melted a 2.5
km2 area of snow and ice.

Water and debris rushed down the slopes, picking up more


debris along the way.
A 5 metre wall of
water and debris
slammed into the town
of Amero, 72 km from
the volcano.

The lahar killed


28,700 people and
destroyed over 5,000
structures in the city.
Nuée ardentes destroy life and property in their paths.

60 people, thousands of animals and fish, and


hundreds of acres of lumber were destroyed by ash
flows from Mt. St. Helens.

A Nuée Ardent killed 20,000 people when Mt. Vesuvius


exploded and shed a pyroclastic flow across the village
of Pompeii in 79 AD.
People and animals
died instantly from the
rushing cloud of hot
gas and ash.
Landslides

Landslides can be generated when a volcano collapses


during an eruption.

During the Mt. St. Helens eruption 2.3 km3 of debris slid
down the mountain at speeds up to 240 km/hr.

The slide traveled over 24 km and left a 45 m deep deposit.

350,000 years ago Mt. Shasta experienced a similar


eruption and landslide that was 20 times greater than that
of Mt. St. Helens.
Volcanic Gases
In addition to making magma more explosive, volcanic eruptions also
include gases that can be deadly to all life.

CO2, SO2 and CO are the most abundant of harmful gases.


SO2 emissions can have direct effects on life in the vicinity
of a volcano.

An eruption in 1783 of Laki Crater (Iceland) produced a


sulfurous haze that lasted for 9 months and killed 75% of
all livestock and 24% of the Icelandic population.

Volcanoes release more than 130 to 230 million tonnes of


CO2 into the atmosphere every year

Humans add CO2 at the rate of approximately 22 billion


tonnes per year (150 times the rate of volcanic production)

Human CO2 production is equal to that if 17,000 volcanoes


like Kilauea were erupting every year.
Mammoth Mountain is
a relatively young
volcano that is emitting
large volumes of CO2.

Gas concentrations in the soil in


some areas near the mountain are
high enough to kill trees and small
animals.
If the air that we breath has more than 10% CO2 it
becomes deadly because it displaces the Oxygen that we
need for respiration.
Lake Nios, Cameroon, is a very deep lake within a volcanic
crater.
The lake is so deep that hydrostatic pressure forces CO2 to
remain at the lake bottom.

When the pressure of the CO2 exceeds a certain limit the


gas rapidly bubbles up out of the lake and flows as an
invisible gas cloud down the adjacent slopes.

On August 61, 1986 such a gas release flowed 19 km


suffocating 1,700 people along its route.
Lake Nyos 10 days after
the 1986 eruption

The fountain in the


background lifts CO2
up to the surface so
that it no longer
accumulates.
Tsunamis

Caused by the displacement of seawater by eruptions


of volcanic islands and submarine volcanoes.

Krakatoa (1883 eruption) killed 36,000 people by the


tsunami, alone (the most deadly outcome of the
eruption).

This is the newly forming


summit of Krakatoa, growing
where the 1883 eruption blew
the top off of the original
volcano.
Global Climate Change

Due to ash and gas that may spend years in the upper
atmosphere; reduces incoming solar radiation.

SO2 from an eruption forms tiny droplets of sulfuric acid


in the upper atmosphere.

The droplets significantly increase global albedo…..a


negative radiative forcing that leads to cooling.

Mt. Pinatubo (1991) released 22 million metric tons of SO2


and reduced the Earth’s average temperature by 0.5
degrees Celsius in the year following the eruption.
A series of eruptions of Tambora (Indonesia) extruded up
to 150 km3 of magma (solid equivalent), much of it into the
atmosphere.

Tambora (1815 eruption) was followed in 1816 by the


“year without a summer”.

Average global temperature is estimated to have been


reduced by 3 degrees Celsius.
In June of 1816 there was widespread snowfall throughout
the eastern United States.

The normal growing season experienced repeated frosts


as cold air extended much more southerly than normal.

Food shortages and starvation are attributed to the deaths


of 80,000 people.

The global population was about 1 billion people in 1816.

Our current population is a little over 6 billion.

The 1816 fatality rate would have resulted in a death toll of


nearly 500,000 people due to starvation.
The concentration mercury
in ice cores from glaciers in
Wyoming record a peak in
atmospheric mercury that
corresponds to the Tambora
eruption.

The atmospheric impact


caused the “year without a
summer” along with 80,000
deaths due to famine and
disease.
Approximately 260,000 people have been killed by volcanoes in
historic times…most by a handful of individual eruptions.
Volcanic Explosivity Index
http://pubs.usgs.gov/publications/msh/comparisons.html
Super Volcanoes
While not defined officially, lets say any eruption that ejects 1000
km3 or more of pyroclastic material (i.e., VEI 8 or more).
According to M.R. Rampino super eruptions take place, on average,
every 50,000 years. Three of the best known eruptions are compared
below.
Toba: the world’s largest Quaternary caldera.

The Australian Plate is subducting


beneath the Eurasian plate at a rate
of 6.7 cm/yr.
Today Toba is a caldera or
depression that is occupied
by Lake Toba.

It is 100 km long and 30 km


wide.

Toba last erupted about


75,000 years ago with the
largest eruption of the last 2
million years.
Three eruptive events have been
recognized.

840,000 years ago

500,000 years ago

74,000 years ago

Each producing a caldera.

Samosir Island, rising 750 m above


the lake, is a dome built from lava
following the last eruption.
The eruption ejected 2,800 cubic km of material and the pyroclastic
flows covered an area of at least 20,000 square km.

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.

Global cooling is estimated at between 3 and 5 degrees Celsius with


regional cooling of 15 degrees C.

Tropical plant life would have been all but eliminated

Temperate forests would loose 50% of all trees.


It is estimated that the growing population of homo sapiens (i.e., us) was
reduced from 100,000 individuals to as few as 3,000 individuals (97% of
all humans were lost!).

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

Known for its hot springs and geysers,


Yellowstone National Park, is likely
the most popular super volcano in the
world.

The park sits on an active caldera that


rises and sinks in response to magma
movement and pressure fluctuations
within the Earth.

Over recent years the surface has risen


by as much as a metre and sunk back
by 1/3 of a metre.

Thousands of small earthquakes are


produced as earth surface moves.
The magma chamber is only 5 to 13 km below the land surface.

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).

This eruption ejected 1,000 km3 of pyroclastic debris.

An earlier eruption (the Huckleberry Ridge Eruption, 2 million years


ago) ejected 2,500 km3
of pyroclastic debris.

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.

Government officials and geologists indicate that there have been no


clear indicators of high risk at this time.

If such an eruption were to take place, North America and the rest of the
world could experience another “Dark Ages”.

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