volcanoes by Mr. Charles Dyson
Types of Volcanoes & Eruptions
Volcanic Fields
Volcanic fields, such as Auckland and Northland, are where small eruptions
occur over a wide geographic area, and are spaced over long periods of time
(thousands of years). Each eruption builds a new single new volcano, which does
not erupt again. Mount Eden and Rangitoto Island are examples in Auckland.
Cone Volcanoes
Cone volcanoes (also called composite cone or stratovolcanoes) such as Ruapehu,
Taranaki / Egmont and Ngauruhoe, are characterised by a succession of
small-moderate eruptions from one location. The products from the successive
eruptions over thousands of years build the cones.
Caldera Volcanoes
Caldera volcanoes, such as Taupo and Okataina (which includes Mt Tarawera),
have a history of infrequent but moderate-large eruptions. The caldera forming
eruptions create super craters 10-25 km in diameter and deposit cubic
kilometres of ash and pumice.
Multiple types of eruptions can occur at each of New Zealand’s volcanoes
- the eruption type can vary minute to minute. The style of eruption depends on
a number of factors, including the magma chemistry and content, temperature,
viscosity (how runny the magma is), volume and how much water and gas is in it,
the presence of groundwater, and the plumbing of the volcano. For information
on volcanic hazards which can be produced by our volcanoes.
Hydrothermal eruption
An eruption driven by the heat in a hydrothermal systems. Hydrothermal
eruptions pulverise surrounding rocks and can produce ash, but do not include
magma. These are typically very small eruptions
Phreatic eruption
An eruption driven by the heat from magma interacting with water. The
water can be from groundwater, hydrothermal systems, surface runoff, a lake or
the sea. Phreatic eruptions pulverise surrounding rocks and can produce ash,
but do not include new magma.
Phreatomagmatic eruption
An eruption resulting
from the interaction of new magma or lava with water and can be very explosive.
The water can be from groundwater, hydrothermal systems, surface runoff, a lake
or the sea.
·
Lava flows are the effusive
(non-explosive) outpourings of lava, and usually flow slower than walking pace.
Lava flow types include a’a, blocky and pahoehoe.
·
Lava fountains are a fountain of
runny lava fragments from a vent or line of vents (a fissure). They can form
spatter piles, and if the fragments accumulate fast enough, they can form lava
flows.
·
Lava domes are mounds that
form when viscous lava is erupted slowly and piles up over the vent, rather
than moving away as a lava flow. They are generally caused by viscous, thick,
sticky lava that has lost most of its gas. They can range in volume from a few
cubic metres to cubic kilometres.
Detailed explanations 👌
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