Hazards: Volcanoes Flashcards
Where do volcanoes occur?
- on or near subduction zones (destructive)
- middle of plates - hotspots
- ocean ridges and rift valleys (constructive)
How do volcanic hazards differ?
- the shape and structure of the volcano and the explosive threat they pose is the result of the type of magma that created them.
- the destructively of a volcano depends on the viscosity (funniness) of the magma
—> low viscosity (runny magma) - shallow sided volcanos
—> high viscosity (sticky, thick magma) - steep sided volcano
What are the 3 things viscosity is affected by?
- Temperature (runny magma will be hotter)
- Silica content (the more silica there is, the thicker)
- Gases (more explosive)
What is basaltic lava?
Hot, low viscosity, non-violent eruptions, flat cones, lava spreads far from volcano, melting of oceanic crust and the mantle so occur at constructive margins and hotspots (island arcs).
—> e.g. Kilauea (Hawaii), Mauna Loa and Surtsey
What are the 2 types of Basaltic lava?
Aā - forms as spikey lava
Pāhoehoe - soft, pillowy lava
What is Andesitic lava?
High eruption plumes, intermediate lavas formed by rising basaltic magma mixing with continental crust before it reaches the surface resulting in violent eruption, this lava is largely formed at subduction zones.
What is Rhyolitic lava?
Thick, viscous lava, secondary vent form, sudden and violent eruptions.
High silica content are formed from the melting of continental crust so form at destructive boundaries.
- e.g. Mount Fuji (Japan) and Mount Pelée (Caribbean)
What are the 2 types of volcano?
- Shield or basic volcano (sloped) -e.g. Mauna Loa, Hawaii
- Composite (steep sided) -e.g. Mt St Helens
How can the magnitude of volcanos be measured?
They can be measured using the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI)
- 0 (non-explosive) - 8 (very large).
- Logarithmic- each interval on scale represents a tenfold increase in the violence of the eruption:
1. Gentle
4. Cataclysmic
8. Mega-colossal (supervolcano)
—> multiple features considered when calculating VEI, e.g. how much tephra erupted and how high it ejected, how long it lasts, etc.
What is the frequency of volcanos?
- varies per volcano.
- either active, dormant or extinct. estimated 50-60 volcanoes erupt each month, meaning eruptions are frequent (some volcanoes erupt constantly). Usually, a higher frequency eruption means effusive whereas low frequency means explosive.
What is the regularity of volcanos?
Volcanic eruptions are regular in that the eruptions on each type of boundary are similar (e.g. eruptions on destructive boundaries will regularly be explosive)
- Sometimes eruptions may be irregular and not fit patterns.
What is the predictability of volcanos?
Regularity of eruptions help estimate when eruptions take place (i.e. every 10 years). Seismic activity, gases releasing, elevation etc. all indicate imminent eruption, but no definite predictions to a volcanic eruption.
What are lava flows? (Primary hazard)
A flow of molten rock or magma
- a lava flow may destroy farmland, buildings and lines of communication, but lives are rarely lost
What is ash (tephra)? (Primary hazard)
Fine-grained ash with larger pyroclastics may be ejected into air during violent eruption
- weight of depositied ash can cause roofs of buildings to collapse
- suffocation of humans and animals
- can wipe out crops and block roads
- blocks solar radiation so cooler temps
- in last 15 years, about 80 commercial jets damaged flying through ash
—> e.g. Mount Marapi (Indonesia)
What is pyroclastic flow/Nuée Ardente? (Primary hazard)
Most dangerous/devastating, a cloud of gas, ash and rocks, can reach temps of 800DC and capable of speeds in excess of 200km/hour
- broken rock with newly released gases sweep down volcano, obliterating everything in its path.
—> e.g. Mt St Helens (USA) in 1980, north face collapsed to unleash a blast -felled fully grown trees upto 25km away.
- if involves mainly gases, often in form of a fireball is a Nuee Ardente - this killed nearly 30,000 people when Mt Pelee erupted.
What are Lahars (mudflows)? (Secondary hazard)
A lahar is a thick, cement-like mudflow of volcanic ash and water (often melted snow/ice that once capped the volcano). Capable of flowing at speeds of 100km/hour and distances of 300km.
- commonly follow river valleys, burying houses and occupants, blocking roads and destroying bridges, also blanketing fertile floodplains with thick mud that hardens like concrete
—> e.g. Nevada del Ruiz killed 1000s of people in the town of Armero