Mrs. Burt’s Physical Science Class Unit 3: Chemistry Lesson 3, 4, 5.
Physical Science 3/11-3/12
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Transcript of Physical Science 3/11-3/12
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Physical Science 3/11-3/12
Volcanoes
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New homework
• Read pages 714-717
• Try problems 2,3 and 7 on pg 717
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Volcanoes
• Definition– An opening on the earth’s surface through
which molten rock flows and the material that builds up around
• Location
Are all volcanoes equally dangerous?
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Types of Volcanoes
• Shield Volcanoes
• Composite Volcanoes
• Cinder Volcanoes
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Hazards of volcanoes
Ash Fall
Pyroclastic Flows (Nuee Ardentes)
Mud Flows (Lahars)
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Pyroclastic flow
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Lahars
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Note the mud on trees
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Hazards
• Volcanic Bombs
Any sizeable fragment of rock thrown from an active volcano
gravel size up to boulders the size of buses
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Volcanic Bombs
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Hazards from the volcanic gases
The expansion of gases as it is heated
Produces most of the eruptive force of a ash volcano
Water Vapor is the most common gas released
Carbon Dioxide and Sulfur Dioxide are next
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Gas hazards related to volcanoes
• Lake Nyos,• Cameroon, Africa• 1986• Release of Carbon
dioxide• Since CO2 is heavier
than air it hugs the ground
• This cloud was 100 m high
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Constant release of gases
• Trees died by CO2 suffocation
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Tsunami
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Volcanic Hazards
• TsunamisMeans “Great Wave”
Not related to tides
Generated mainly by underwater earthquakes or landslides that displace a lot of wateror volcanic eruption in or under the water
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Tsunamis
• Generally more than one wave
• Wave is much wider than typical ocean wave (wall of water)
• Travels around 500 mph in open water, slows down as it nears shore
• Height increases as waves nears shore– Some waves from Krakatoa reached over 100 ft tall
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Final Hazard
• The unpredictability of some volcanoes lead some people to ignore warnings
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Long-term volcanic benefits
• Fertile soil
• Volcanic products– Pumice– Sulfur– Diamonds– Metamorphic ore
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Parts of a volcano• Vent – opening where molten rock is pushed out to the surface of
earth
• Magma Chamber - Chamber below volcano, holds the molten rock used in eruption
• Cone – mound created from solid material released from previous eruption
• Crater – hole (depression) at the top of volcano created by volcanic explosion
• Caldera – depression left on top of the volcano created by the collapse of the magma chamber
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What are the differences and similarities between:
• Fumaroles
• Geysers
• Hot Springs
• Mud-pots
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Fumaroles
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Fumarole
An opening in the earth that emit gases
May be found some distance from the from the main vent
Gases are heated by the volcanic sources, travel through cracks and fractures to surface
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Hot Springs
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Hot Springs
• Openings that are filled with water that is heated by nearby volcanic activity
• The water may range from mild to scalding, and include both helpful and toxic minerals
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Geyser
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Geysers
A hot spring with specific ideal physical arrangement that allows it to periodically erupt
No convection, cold water cap over volcanically heated water
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Mud Pots
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Mud Pots
• Similar to a hot spring
• Form in places where water is scarce
• Mixture of a little water and volcanic ash
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Where are volcanoes found in the world?
Convergent
Divergent
Other
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One other place of volcano formation
• Hot Spots
• Created because a narrow stream of hot mantle raises up from the core-mantle boundary
• Long lasting point of heat, stationary with respect to the plates
• If formed under ocean crust, creates an island arc
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Places where there might be a hot spot
• Hawaii
• Yellowstone
• Iceland
• Tahiti
• Up to 50 places in the world
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Types of lava
Aa-
Pahoehoe-
Pillow lava-
Difference is based location and composition
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Homework
• New Handout (Section 7.1-7.2)
• Section 7.1– All Questions except 4
Section 7.2
questions 1-6 and 10