Mod 2.2 Study Deck Flashcards
What is the evolution of Earth’s atmosphere and oceans?
Gases emitted during volcanic eruptions
Differences between St. Helens Volcano Eruption vs. Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii?
1.) St. Helens Volcano = 1980 / Kilauea Volcano = 1983
2.) St. Helens Volcano = largest volcanic eruption in North America / Kilauea Volcano = non-explosive eruptions
3.) St. Helens Volcano = extreme aftermath/blew out north flank of volcano / Kilauea Volcano = relatively quiet outpourings
4.) St. Helens Volcano = killed 59 people (intense heat/suffocating, impact, and mudflows) / Kilauea Volcano = more than 180 home and national park visitor’s center destroyed (no people killed)
Why are some volcanic eruptions explosive and others quiescent?
- Quiescent = effusive; outpourings (fluid lava); harmless; low viscosity (measure of fluid’s mobility)
-Explosive = more spurts (lava); more intense eruptions; harmful; high viscosity (measure of fluid’s mobility); eruption columns (buoyant plumes of hot, ash-laden gases)
Factors of an Eruption Type
Factors:
1.) Viscosity (measure of fluid’s mobility); depends on temperature and silica content; direct relationship to eruption type
2.) Gas content (basaltic, granitic, andesitic)
Magma vs. Lava
-Magma = body of molten rock; gases = water vapor and carbon dioxide; including any dissolved gases and crystals
-Lava = erupted magma
Location of Magma Generation
-Earth’s Upper Mantle
-Partial melting (solid rock)
Magma Composition
- Basaltic rocks (dark color; high % dark silicate material; caused by seafloor spreading; eruptions = high % dark silicate materials; eruptions = highest temp)
-Granitic rocks (light-colored silicate materials; lower % silica; crust-mantle boundary; eruptions = lowest temp)
-Andesitic rocks = combo (granitic and basaltic rocks)
Three categories of materials let go during volcanic eruptions
1.) Lava: flow (basaltic lava) = fluid; flow in thin, broad sheets; speed = > 30 km/hr (usually between 100 m - 300 m); flow (silica-rich rhyolitic lava) = very slow; 90% (total volume of Earth’s lava) = basaltic lava (eruptions = submarine volcanism (seafloor eruptions)
2.) Large volumes of gas: volatiles (gaseous components of magma dissolved in melt); gaseous portion = < 1% - 8% (total weight); form = water vapor
3.) Pyroclastic materials: broken rock, lava “bombs”, and ash; scoria = vesicular eject; produced during basaltic magma eruptions; ash and dust = explosive eruptions; size = very fine dust - sand-sized volcanic ash
Pillow lava (definition)
Basaltic lava = solidifies underwater
2 types (basaltic lava flows)
1.) aa flow (jagged, blocky surface); cooler
2.) pahoehoe flow (smooth-to-ropey surface); hotter
Composition of Volcanic Gases
- H20
-CO2
-SO2
-H2S
-CO
-N2