Volcanoes - CSS General Science & Ability Notes
Volcanoes - CSS General Science & Ability Notes
Volcanoes - CSS General Science & Ability Notes
A volcano is a place on the Earth’s surface (or any other planet’s or moon’s surface) where
molten rock, gases and pyroclastic debris erupt through the earth’s crust. Volcanoes vary
quite a bit in their structure – some are cracks in the earth’s crust where lava erupts, and
some are domes, shields, or mountain-like structures with a crater at the summit.
Magma is molten rock within the Earth’s crust. When magma erupts through the earth’s
surface it is called lava. Lava can be thick and slow-moving or thin and fast-moving. Rock
also comes from volcanoes in other forms, including ash (finely powdered rock that looks
like dark smoke coming from the volcano), cinders (bits of fragmented lava), and pumice
(light-weight rock that is full of air bubbles and is formed in explosive volcanic eruptions –
this type of rock can float on water).
The word volcano comes from the Roman god of fire, Vulcan. Vulcan was said to have had a
forge (a place to melt and shape iron) on Vulcano, an active volcano on the Lipari Islands in
Italy.
The earth is made up of three layer parts. The outer crust is the layer on which we live.
It is estimated to be about 1800 miles deep. Then there is the mantle; and then the
core (inner and outer core)
The mantle is made up of molten material and gases. Molten materials are solids (like
rock) that have turned into liquid because of extreme heat. The name for molten rock
and other gases in the earth’s mantle is Magma. Magma is liquid made up of many
crystals, fragments and gases including oxygen, silicon, iron, aluminum, magnesium
and manganese. When they cool off on the earth’s surface, they turn into magmatic or
igneous rocks.
Whenever extreme pressure builds in the mantle, along fault lines (openings or cracks
in weak spots in the earth’s crust) an eruption is likely to happen next. During an
eruption, molten materials (soon to become lava) gush out through spaces in the crust
to the surface.
NOTE: Molten rock is called magma when it is inside the crust but once it gets to the
surface of the earth it is called lava.
Eruptions can be in the form of lava fragments shooting into the atmosphere and
forming thick clouds of lava. Some also flow slowly (non-violent) from the vent,
flooding the area around it. Very fine particles of ash may also be discharged high into
the stratosphere and further carried away by wind action.
Fresh lava is believed to be about 2,200°F. It can be red hot as it shoots from the vent
and turn into gray or black as it cools. Lava rich in silicon is like honey, and flows a lot
more slowly from the vent. In other types, lava also comes in thick, pasty form.
Types of Volcano
There are three main types of volcano. Scientists decide what type a volcano is examining
the plate movements that have caused it to form.
ubduction volcanoes. Subduction volcanoes occur where plates move towards each
other and collide. The areas where this happens are called destructive plate margins,
because the earth’s crust is being destroyed. The diagrams on this page show that
three main types of destructive plate margin, where subduction volcanoes are formed.
Rift volcanoes. Where plates are moving apart, as in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean,
magma rises through the gap between the separating plates and creates new rock.
Here the volcanoes are known as rift volcanoes. There are more rift volcanoes than
subduction volcanoes, but we hear far less about them. Most of them are hidden from
view on the ocean floor, and they do not often threaten human life or property. Also,
they usually erupt more gently than other types of volcano, with lava that oozes rather
than explodes from inside them. Iceland, which straddles the Mid-Atlantic Ocean
Ridge, and the Rift Valley of East Africa are two of the few places where rift volcanoes
are found on land.
Hot-spot volcanoes. Some volcanoes are found away from the edges of the plates. They
are formed where rising plumes of magma force their way to the surface from deep
within the mantle, a ‘hot spot’. As the plate moves, the existing volcano is carried away
from the hot spot and becomes extinct. The next time the pressure builds up, new
magma erupts to form another volcano in its place. The best-known hot-spot volcanoes
are in the Hawaiian Islands. The oldest in the west, such as Niihau and Kauai, contain
extinct volcanoes, but the eastern islands of Maui and Hawaii itself still have active
volcanoes.
Distribution of Volcanoes
There are three volcanic belts, besides many volcanoes which are outside these belts. The
three volcanic belts are as under:
This is the most important belt of volcanoes. This is the so called Ring of Fire. The Ring of
Fire is an area where a large number of earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur in the
basin of the Pacific The Ring of Fire has 452 volcanoes and is home to over 75% of the
world’s active and dormant volcanoes It is sometimes called the circum-Pacific belt or the
circum-Pacific seismic belt.About 90% of the world’s earthquakes and 81% of the world’s
largest earthquakes occur along the Ring of Fire. The belt extends through the Andes of
South America, Central America, Mexico, the Cascade Mountains of Western United States,
the Aleutain Islands, Kamchatka, the Kuril Isles, Japan, the Philippines, Celebes, New
Guinea, the Solomon Islands, New Caledonia and New Zealand.
This belt has various volcanoes of the Alpine mountain chain, Mediterranean Sea
(Stromboli, Vesuvius, Etna etc.), Volcanoes of the Aegean Sea. Mt. Ararat, Elburz and Hindu
Kush are also included in this belt. In the region where the boundaries of Iran, Afghanistan,
and Pakistan meet, there are several volcanic cones of large size, and one or two of them
emit steam and other gases. This region has also a few extinct volcanoes.
As the name indicates, this belt includes the volcanoes of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The
volcanoes associated with the Atlantic Ocean are located either on swells or ridges rising
from the sea floor, or on or near the edge of the continent where it slopes abruptly into the
deep oceanic basins. However, in each case, the volcanoes are associated with zones of
crystal movement.
Unlike other natural disasters such as floods, wild fires and earthquakes, volcanoes can
have some positive effects, even though they can be very disastrous.
Eruptions occurring close to human settlements may spill and destroy lives and
property. People often have to be evacuated. Example: Chaparrastique volcano in El
Salvador started erupting on 29 Dec, 2013. Anyone living within 2 miles of the volcano
is evacuated.
Ash discharged very high into the stratosphere can have negative consequences on the
ozone layer.
Landscapes and natural sceneries can be destroyed.
Ash and mud can mix with rain and melting snow, forming lahars. Lahars are
mudflows flowing at very fast pace.
Some positive effects of volcanoes include:
Different types of erupting volcanoes provide extraordinary scenery, so beautiful and
natural that they attract tourists to the area, bringing in some economic value.
Places close to volcanic activities tend to have higher potential for geothermal energy,
which can be an advantage to the towns and cities.
Some ash and lava breakdown become soils that are rich in nutrients, and become
good areas for crop planting activities.
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