Volcano

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Transcript of Volcano

Page 1: Volcano

Volcanoes

created by TeachPower.net

This lesson is a preview of a full complete lesson and contains

animation, sounds, video, and pictures that SlideShare.net does not show. To preview this lesson as it was originally

intended please go to http://teachpower.net, click on the

Lesson PowerPoints tab at the top, and scroll down until you see the name of

this lesson in the appropriate category.

Page 2: Volcano

Magma Chamber

SideVent

VentCrater

Pipe

Page 3: Volcano

Hot SpotsHot Spots

• Hot spots are caused from pockets of magma that raise up through openings in the crust.

• While the plate moves the magma oozes out, cools, and makes new layers on top of other layers.

• When these layers raise up above the level of the ocean they make islands, for example like the Hawaiian islands.

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Ring of Fire

• Ring of Fire are volcanoes that are located on the edges of the Pacific plate that happen to make a rough ring of volcanoes.

• Ring of fire is where most of the active volcanoes are located.

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Styles of EruptionsStyles of Eruptions

• Eruptions could be either explosive and violent or soft and quiet.

• Explosive volcanoes act like a soda can that has been shaken up.

– Trapped gases like water vapor and CO2 are in the magma and build up pressure until the magma nears the surface and the gases escape all at once forcefully.

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Magma Composition & Composition & Water Content Content

• Magma that is low in silica is very liquidy and makes quiet eruptions (EX: Kilauea in Hawaii)– This lava pours out from sides of volcanoes

called vents. It also pours out from rift zones which are long deep cracks like in Iceland.

• Magma with lots of silica make very violent, explosive eruptions (EX: Mount St. Helens in Washington)

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Forms of VolcanoesForms of Volcanoes

Shield Volcano

– Quiet eruptions spread out silica poor lave in flat layers.

– Have gentle sloping sides.

– Looks like a shield laying down.

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Forms of Volcanoes

• Composite Volcano

– Some volcanoes can be either explosive or quiet. When a volcano erupts explosively then erupt quietly the next time, it makes different layers of tephra and cinders which is why it is called a composite volcano.

– Mount St. Helens is a composite volcano because the Juan de Fuca plate was forced below the North American plate which caused eruptions to be explosive then quiet at different times.