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Volcanoes Silica (SiO2) and water content controls viscosity of magma
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Date | 03.03.2018 | Size | 9.1 Kb. | | #41708 |
| Volcanoes Silica (SiO2) and water content controls viscosity of magma. In order of decreasing silica: Rhyolite (most viscous)- lava domes Andesite Basalt (most fluid)- lava flows
Volcanoes Mt. St Helens- Cascadia subduction Iceland – mid-Atlantic ridge
Mafic magma – rich in Fe, Mg – low silica, low viscosity. Not explosive. Effusive. Felsic composition – rich in Silica – high viscosity – explosive. Trapped gases (steam 80%, CO2 10%, nitrogen) in magma
Volcano types
Shield volcanoes- low angle slopes e.g Hawaii Strato volcanoes- high angle slopes – Mt. St. Helens Lava dome – high viscosity dome Cinder cone – small volcano of pyroclastic material (volcanic fragments)
Form over hot spots from mantle India: Deccan Traps: ½ million sq. miles Same age as dinosaur extinction (any connection?) Pyro- fire; clastic - fragments Tephra Blocks Bombs Cinder Ash Dust
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