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Quiz # 1 Chapters 1 and 2
Quiz # 1 Chapters 1 and 2

... Use these questions to test your understanding of Lecture 4. A. Short answer: 1. When hot particles within a nuée ardente fall to the ground and stick together, a welded _____ forms. 2. A flow of mud and pyroclastic material is called a ________. 3. A volcanic dome forms when rising ________ cools a ...
Volcanoes
Volcanoes

...  Often the volcano sides will be higher than the vent forming a depression called a crater ...
and benefits - of volcanic eruptions
and benefits - of volcanic eruptions

... beneath... The material was black and rather fine lava sand...Everywhere the sand was coated with a thin film of crystalline white salt, common sea salt, to judge by the taste, and this made the cone white as seen at a distance. Jaggar (1919) ...
volcanoes - an-0001
volcanoes - an-0001

... • Devastating mudflows, known as lahars, are caused by ashes, soil and rock combining on volcanic slopes. ...
Mt. Vesuvius - Central Square School District
Mt. Vesuvius - Central Square School District

... 79 AD Eruption The Vesuvius eruption began at midday on August 24, 79 AD There were two phases of this eruption: 1.)Plinian phase, where material was ejected in a tall column, spread in atmosphere and fell to earth like rain. 2) Peléan phase where material flowed down the sides of the volcano as fa ...
Practice04c
Practice04c

... Use these questions to test your understanding of Lecture 4. A. Short answer: 1. When hot particles within a nuée ardente fall to the ground and stick together, a welded _____ forms. 2. A flow of mud and pyroclastic material is called a ________. 3. A volcanic dome forms when rising ________ cools a ...
Homework for Volcanoes from Geology 1200
Homework for Volcanoes from Geology 1200

... Use these questions to test your understanding of Chapter 4. A. Short answer: 1. When hot particles within a nuée ardente fall to the ground and stick together, a welded _____ forms. 2. A flow of mud and pyroclastic material is called a ________. 3. A volcanic dome forms when rising ________ cools a ...
volcanoes - Catawba County Schools
volcanoes - Catawba County Schools

... • Name given to particles produced by eruption. They range in size from very fine dust to pieces that weigh several tons • Lapilli- range from small beads to walnuts (2-64 mm). Also called cinders • Blocks- anything larger than 64 mm and are made of hardened lava and bombs (which are pieces of semi- ...
Volcanoes lesson 2
Volcanoes lesson 2

... collapse of an ancient volcano, posthumously named Mount Mazama. This volcano violently erupted approximately 7700 years ago. The basin was formed after the top 5000 feet of the volcano collapsed. Subsequent lava flows sealed the bottom, allowing the caldera to fill with approximately 4.6 trillion g ...
Lecture11_volcanic_landforms
Lecture11_volcanic_landforms

... the gas is dissolved within the magma when the magma is under pressure. Gas bubbles and froth on surface of the lava, similar to bubbles on top of soda. Obsidian flow, Long Valley Caldera, California, was created by crustal collapse associated with an explosive eruption about 650,000 years ago. Sinc ...
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY

... The paper model in this report represents a stratovolcano, or composite volcano. It is the most common type of volcano on Earth. Scientists classify volcanoes into three main types: cinder cones, shield volcanoes, and stratovolcanoes (composite volcanoes). Cinder cones are the smallest and have stee ...
Volcanic Activity
Volcanic Activity

... Gas content, how thick or thin the magma is, temperature and silica contents are important factors as to the force of a volcanic eruptions.  The amount of silica in magma helps to determine how easily the magma flows. Silica is formed from the elements oxygen and silicon and is abundant in the crus ...
Volcanoes
Volcanoes

... plug their vents until the force of escaping magma blows the vent clear; such magmas cause explosive volcanoes. ...
File
File

... If warm enough water evaporates ...
Volcano Types (39)
Volcano Types (39)

... • Water vapor and carbon dioxide are trapped in magma by the pressure of the surrounding magma and rock. • As magma nears the surface, it is under less pressure, which allows gases to escape, causing non explosive volcanoes. • Gas that builds up to high pressures eventually causes explosive eruption ...
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 ...
DISASTER EMERGENCY RESPONSE. Part VI.
DISASTER EMERGENCY RESPONSE. Part VI.

... PHILLIPINES: JUNE 1991 ...
Igneous Environments and Volcanoes - H
Igneous Environments and Volcanoes - H

... lava flows, pyroclastic flows, lahars and give examples of each. Identify some examples of composite, shield, dome, and scoria cone volcanoes from around the world. Summarize the type of eruptions that occurred at Vesuvius, Pelee, Mount St. Helens, Krakatau, and Santorini and the cause of most of th ...
Volcanoes
Volcanoes

... steep heap of loose rock held together by the force of gravity and a cubic mile of glacier ice that could be melted or shaken loose • Lahar flows average every 500 years and have gone as far as the Puget Sound lowlands (1 in 7 chance of it happening during your lifetime) • Mount Rainier has erupted ...
Word
Word

... 8. The three main classes of rocks are classified by how they formed. (1) _________ rocks form from molten rock. (2) _________ rocks form by surface processes. (3) _________ rocks form from existing rocks that are changed by pressure and temperature. A. (1) igneous (2) sedimentary (3) metamorphic B. ...
Geol 101: Physical Geology PAST EXAM QUESTIONS LECTURE 8
Geol 101: Physical Geology PAST EXAM QUESTIONS LECTURE 8

... 8. The three main classes of rocks are classified by how they formed. (1) _________ rocks form from molten rock. (2) _________ rocks form by surface processes. (3) _________ rocks form from existing rocks that are changed by pressure and temperature. A. (1) igneous (2) sedimentary (3) metamorphic B. ...
Types of Lavas Types of Basalts
Types of Lavas Types of Basalts

... of basalt, typically fed by fissures • Pahoehoe: a very low viscosity basaltic lava characterized by a ropy texture • Aa: a relatively low viscosity basaltic lava characterized by a jagged, blocky texture • Pillow Basalts: a basaltic lava extruded beneath the water, characterized by glassy pillows f ...
Homework04 n
Homework04 n

... 5. When basaltic lava erupts beneath the sea, it forms a ________ structure. 6. A volcano with a composite cone has layers of _______ and layers of pyroclastic material within the cone. 7. Volcanoes that form on continent margins above subduction zones typically have _______ silica than volcanoes in ...
Volcanoes and Other Igneous Activity
Volcanoes and Other Igneous Activity

... Composite Volcanoes • Composite cones or stratovolcanoes – Located around the Ring of Fire ...
Chapter 12 Section 4
Chapter 12 Section 4

... Evidence has shown that volcanoes contribute enough greenhouse gas to affect climate long after the eruption has ended! ...
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Itcha Range



The Itcha Range is a small isolated mountain range in the West-Central Interior of British Columbia, Canada. It is located 40 km (25 mi) northeast of Anahim Lake on the Chilcotin Plateau. With a maximum elevation of 2,375 m (7,792 ft), it is the lowest of three mountain ranges extending east from the Coast Mountains. Two mountains are named in the Itcha Range; Mount Downton and Itcha Mountain. A large provincial park surrounds the Itcha Range and other features in its vicinity. More than 15 animal species are known to exist in the Itcha Range area, as well as a grassland community that is limited only to this location of British Columbia. The Itcha Range resides in the territory of aboriginal peoples who have occupied this region for centuries. This area has a relatively dry environment compared to the Coast Mountains in the west.In contrast to most mountain ranges in British Columbia, the Itcha Range represents an inactive shield volcano. This highly dissected volcanic edifice consists of a variety of rock types, including basanite, hawaiite, trachyte, rhyolite, phonolite and alkali olivine basalt. They were deposited by different types of volcanic eruptions characterized by passive lava flows and explosivity. Two stages of eruptive activity have been identified at the volcano along with three sub-phases that are limited only to the first stage of development. The main body of the Itcha Range is between 3.8 and 3.0 million years old and thus over two million years ago it passed the most active shield stage of life. A long period of dormancy lasting for almost a million years followed, which was interrupted by the post-shield stage of volcanism 2.2 to 0.8 million years ago. More recent volcanic activity in and around the Itcha Range might have occurred in the last 340,000 years to produce cinder cones.The Itcha Range is part of an east-west trending volcanic zone called the Anahim Volcanic Belt. This consists of large shield volcanoes, small cinder cones, lava domes and lava flows that become progressively younger from west to east. Several explanations have been made regarding the creation of this feature, each citing a different geologic process. If volcanic activity were to resume at the Itcha Range, Canada's Interagency Volcanic Event Notification Plan (IVENP) is prepared to notify people threatened by eruptions.
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