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Volcano Science Highlights
Volcano Science Highlights

... Madeleine O'Brien, 08:00 - 12:20, Moscone South - Poster Hall ...
volcano eruption styles
volcano eruption styles

... direct lava flows by: Diverting the flow with barriers built with bulldozers  Diverting by bombing one or all of the following locations - the vent, edge of a flow, tube entrance  Water the flow front - not very successful! ...
Chapter 9 Test Review Notes
Chapter 9 Test Review Notes

... volcanoes are very large. They form when basaltic lava erupts and flows long distances before hardening. Over time, layers of hardened lava build up into a broad-based, shield-shaped volcano. ...
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... depending on the type of lava erupted, discharge, slope of the ground over which the lava travels, and duration of the eruption. ...
Popular classification of volcanoes
Popular classification of volcanoes

... Super-volcano: the great devastator A super-volcano is a large volcano that usually has a large caldera and can potentially produce devastation on an enormous, sometimes continental, scale. Such eruptions would be able to cause severe cooling of global temperatures for many years afterwards because ...
Volcanoes
Volcanoes

... • Lahars are mud flows that often occur after eruptions. • Nuée ardentes are mobile dense clouds of incandescent ash that can move downhill at speeds up to 100 , km/hr. Mt Pelee destroyed St. Pierre on the island of Martinique, West Indies in 1902 ...
HST_CRF_04_02_03.qxd
HST_CRF_04_02_03.qxd

... 1. Volcanic eruptions can be times stronger than the explosion produced by the first atomic bomb. 2. What is magma? 3. Magma that flows onto the Earth’s surface is called . 4. What is a volcano? ...
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Created with Sketch. Who`s on your team?
Created with Sketch. Who`s on your team?

... Since New Zealand sits on the boundary of the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates, it is not surprising that volcanoes are such a characteristic part of New Zealand’s landscape. In such a volcanic region, what would happen if a volcano did erupt in a populated area of New Zealand? Would we b ...
Volcanic Eruptions
Volcanic Eruptions

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Volcanoes affect Earth`s land, air, and water.
Volcanoes affect Earth`s land, air, and water.

... A volcanic eruption can knock down forests and clog rivers with volcanic ash. Damage can occur far from the volcano. But volcanoes build as well as destroy. Material erupted from volcanoes can form new land. Over time, lava flows can form new, rich soil. Many towns and cities are located close to vo ...
The Eruption of Mount Pinatubo
The Eruption of Mount Pinatubo

... Mt Pinatubo erupted in June 1991. It is located on a destructive plate boundary between the Eurasian and Philippine plate. Convection currents cause the Oceanic Philippine plate to subduct below the Eurasian continental plate which causes pressure to build up. As the plate subducts it melts into mag ...
Chapter 6 Volcanoes
Chapter 6 Volcanoes

... Four major kinds of pyroclastic materials &descriptions: 1.Volcanic blocks- largest pieces, of solid rock 2.Volcanic bombs- largest blobs of magma harden in the air, shape of bomb. 3.Lapilli- “little stone” little bits of magma become solid before hit the ground 4.Volcanic ash- forms when magma expa ...
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_____ 1. What happens to the atmosphere after large

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Lecture 21 Mount St Helens November 29th
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... Map showing debris avalanches (brown) associated with all of the Hawaiian volcanic islands (green). Note how they have traveled up to 200 km from their source. ...
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Australia`s volcanic history is a lot more recent than you
Australia`s volcanic history is a lot more recent than you

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Chapter 6 Study Guide
Chapter 6 Study Guide

... What forms when magma hardens in a volcano’s pipe and is later exposed? ______________. California’s Mount Shasta and Lassen Peak are volcanoes caused by __________ of the Juan de Fuca plate. A(n) _____________ happens when an explosive eruption hurls ash, cinders, bombs, and gases out of a volcano. ...
Volcanoes/REVIEW
Volcanoes/REVIEW

... 4. What types of lava are produced by quiet eruptions? _____________________________________________ 5. What other eruption is there besides a quiet eruption and how is it different than a quiet eruption? _________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ ...
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-1- 1. Distinguish between intrusive and extrusive igneous rocks. 2

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Chapter 12
Chapter 12

... That makes it 3 times the height of Mt. Everest. Unlike Everest, Olympus Mons has a very gentle slope. It is up to 550 km at its base. ...
national geographic readings on volcanoes - Whitlock-Science
national geographic readings on volcanoes - Whitlock-Science

... 2. If this volcano blew 10 times the amount of ash that Mt. St. Helens did, then why was it not reported very much in the news? 3. How long did the eruption last? 4. How does the ash in the air possibly alter global climate? 5. Why was it difficult to find out how many people died in the eruption? ...
Volcano in south Japan erupts, disrupting flights
Volcano in south Japan erupts, disrupting flights

... Kumamoto, the nearest city, have been canceled. The observatory does not expect the eruption to increase in scale. Mount Aso, about 1,000 kilometers (625 miles) southwest of Tokyo on Kyushu island, is one of the world's largest. Earthquakes and other seismic activity stepped up ...
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Mount Pinatubo



Mount Pinatubo (Filipino: Bundok Pinatubo) is an active stratovolcano in the Cabusilan Mountains on the island of Luzon, near the tripoint of the Philippine provinces of Zambales, Tarlac, and Pampanga. Before the volcanic activities of 1991, its eruptive history was unknown to most people. It was heavily eroded, inconspicuous and obscured from view. It was covered with dense forest which supported a population of several thousand indigenous people, the Aetas, who fled to the mountains during the Spanish conquest of the Philippines.The volcano's Plinian / Ultra-Plinian eruption on 15 June 1991 produced the second largest terrestrial eruption of the 20th century after the 1912 eruption of Novarupta in the Alaska Peninsula.Complicating the eruption was the arrival of Typhoon Yunya (Diding), bringing a lethal mix of ash and rain to areas surrounding the volcano. Successful predictions at the onset of the climactic eruption led to the evacuation of tens of thousands of people from the surrounding areas, saving many lives, but the surrounding areas were severely damaged by pyroclastic flows, ash deposits, and subsequently, by the lahars caused by rainwaters re-mobilizing earlier volcanic deposits causing extensive destruction to infrastructure and changing the river systems months to years after the eruption.The effects of the eruption were felt worldwide. It ejected roughly 10,000,000,000 tonnes (1.1×1010 short tons) or 10 km3 (2.4 cu mi) of magma, and 20,000,000 tonnes (22,000,000 short tons) SO2, bringing vast quantities of minerals and metals to the surface environment. It injected more particulate into the stratosphere than any eruption since Krakatoa in 1883. Over the following months, the aerosols formed a global layer of sulfuric acid haze. Global temperatures dropped by about 0.5 °C (0.9 °F) in the years 1991-93, and ozone depletion temporarily increased substantially.
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