VO L2: What Threats Do Volcanoes Pose? Flashcards

1
Q

Why has the rate at which humans have been killed by volcanic eruptions greatly increased since 1800?

A

as world population increases, more people are living closer to active volcanoes

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2
Q

What temperature do mafic lava flows erupt at?

A

1200 - 1400 degrees C

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3
Q

How do mafic lava flows flow?

A

Low viscosity, so they can flow and spread laterally out of a stream canyon onto a valley floor.

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4
Q

What kind of lava flow is non explosive?

A

Mafic lava flows.

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5
Q

Hazard of mafic flows?

A

Infrastructure damage (roads and buildings are easily overrun and incinerated). Most people can run out of the way or avoid it.

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6
Q

From where does lava flow on shield volcanoes? How does it flow?

A

from fissures. They erupt from long periods of time, and cover very large areas.

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7
Q

How many shield volcanoes on Hawaii? Youngest to oldest?

A
  1. Kilauea, Mauna Loa, Mauna Kea, Hualalai and Kohala
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8
Q

What are fire fountains? How are fire fountains created?

A

Small explosive eruptions, created from the excessive gas that basaltic lava sometimes contains. They may come together and reform a lava flow as they fall back to the ground.

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9
Q

What is tephra?

A

pyroclastic material (synonym)

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10
Q

What is scoria?

A

mafic pyroclasts

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11
Q

What are the smallest pyroclasts?

A

Ash particles, <2mm diameter.

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12
Q

How are ash particles formed?

A

form from fragmentation of a frothy magma, when the PRESSURE within the gas bubbles EXCEEDS the strength of the viscous magma

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13
Q

Describe the step-by-step process of how the gas bubbles form.

A

Gas bubbles form in a high-silica magma but do not pop because of the high viscosity. Therefore, the pressure in each bubble increases as the magma makes it way towards the surface.
The bubbles expand until they are almost touching. At this point the magma is frothy, as only thin walls of silicate melt are present in between adjacent bubbles.
BOOM! The gas pressure in the bubbles exceeds the strength of the thin walls of silicate melt, causing explosive fragmentation, and triangular glass shards called ash rise into the atmosphere in an eruption column. Some larger fragments (see definitions below) are left from incomplete fragmentation of the gas-rich magma.

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14
Q

In what kind of magma do gas bubbles form?

A

high-silica magma

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15
Q

Why don’t gas bubbles pop while in the magma?

A

Because of the high viscosity. The pressure in each bubble increases as the magma makes its way towards the surface.

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16
Q

How is ash deposited in large explosive eruptions?

A

Ash falls downwind of volcano. Ash can rise >40 km altitude, where fine ash particles are picked up by global winds and circulated around the world.

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17
Q

How can ash contribute to global cooling?

A

Ash injected into the stratosphere can contribute to a lower amount of solar radiation reaching Earth’s surface. Lower amount of solar radiation = cooler temperatures

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18
Q

What is so bad about ash for humans?

A

Ash can choke vehicle and airplane engines, aggravate respiratory ailments, bury homes and other structures and/or cause their collapse, and cover valuable agricultural land, thereby decreasing the food supply and leading to famine.

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19
Q

What are lapilli?

A

pyroclasts in the 2 – 64 mm range, arger than ash particles. These are associated with large eruption columns and are mostly fragments of vesicular felsic rock called pumice. Lapilli-sized pumice fragments fall out of an eruption column and blanket surrounding areas, forming a pumice fall deposit.

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20
Q

What are the largest pyroclasts?

A

Bombs and blocks (> 64 mm in diameter). These are explosively ejected during an eruption as ballistic projectiles, most of which land near the volcanic vent.

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21
Q

What consists pyroclastic flows?

A

hot gas and pyroclastic fragments

22
Q

Most lethal of eruptive products?

A

Pyroclastic flows. These flow mostly along channels, ridges, and valleys, but can also jump the banks as it travels at high speed over tens of kilometres.

23
Q

Effects from pyroclastic flows?

A

mostly limited to the immediate vicinity of the source volcano, but all life and structures in its path are destroyed

24
Q

What is lahar?

A

A.k.a. volcanic mud or debris flows are extremely destructive mixtures of water, ash, rock fragments of all sizes, and debris that travel swiftly down slope from a volcano, at speeds up to 50 km/hr (much slower than pyroclastic flows)

25
Q

When do lahars occur?

A

Some lahars are hot when they are emplaced because they are associated with pyroclastic eruptions, but other lahars may occur long after volcanic activity has ceased.

26
Q

Damage of lahars?

A

They do a lot of damage because they travel long distances away from a volcano so their presence may not be associated with it, and they can occur in between times of volcanic activity. Roads, bridges, houses, livestock, and people may all be caught up in their destructive path.

27
Q

What can cause lahars?

A

Some volcanic eruptions can cause their own micro-weather system which can result in lahars. Water, a common gaseous product of eruption, can be blown high into the atmosphere as steam, eventually to fall as heavy rain. Rain falling on thick accumulations of pyroclastic material on steep slopes set off lahars. This sequence of events buried the city of Herculaneum days after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, in Campania, Italy.

28
Q

What does formation of lahar require?

A

pyroclastic material and water. Lots of water!

29
Q

Where does the water from the formation of lahar come from?

A

The water may come from melted snow and ice high on the flanks of a volcano.

30
Q

Why does Mt Rainier have a history of producing large lahars?

A

because of its great height, extensive glacial cap, frequent earthquakes, and active hot-water spring systems, it is inherently unstable, thus a very dangerous volcano for the heavily populated areas surrounding it. The mountain itself could fail in a massive avalanche and/or rapidly melted ice can cause floods and lahars.

31
Q

Most common components of gas?

A

Water and carbon dioxide

32
Q

How much gas in magma?

A

1 to 10%

33
Q

How do volcanoes contribute to acid rain?

A

SO_2 may combine with H_2O to form dilute sulfuric acid H_2SO_4. This forms acid rain, which can destroy crops, leach heavy metals from steel structures, nails, and paint. Contaminates drinking water supplies.

34
Q

Why is carbon dioxide CO_2 dangerous? Give an example of what happen in Lake Nyos.

A

it is denser than air, can accumulate in low areas. In 1986 in Cameroon, Africa, sudden release of 109 m^3 of CO_2 previously trapped in sediments on lake floor asphyxiated 1700 people and all livestock in the area, without warning.

35
Q

Synonym for volcanic landslide?

A

sector collapse

36
Q

What is a volcanic landslide/ sector collapse?

A

down slope failure of a portion of a volcanic structure.

37
Q

What causes volcanic landslide?

A

when eruptive products that compose the volcano are altered to clay minerals by hydrothermal fluids. Clays have low shear strength. Combination of water flowing into volcano and clay leads to failure under the influence of gravity without warning.

38
Q

What can volcanic landslides turn into down slope?

A

mudflows or debris flows

39
Q

What is a debris avalanche?

A

a mass of rock fragments and soil that has moved rapidly down a steep mountain slope or hillside and because of its high water content has behaved like an avalanche of snow. sector collapse can be classified as debris avalanche

40
Q

How can volcanic landslides be triggered?

A

by volcanic activity, earthquakes, rapid melting of snow and ice, or heavy rainfall events

41
Q

What did C.G. Newhall and S. Self create?

A

a Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI)

42
Q

Why is the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) created?

A

To provide a relative measure of the explosiveness of volcanic eruptions and to classify eruptions as to their potential for disaster. The classification considers

43
Q

What does the VEI consider?

A

volume of eruption products, eruption plume or cloud height, duration of eruption, qualitative observations

44
Q

Why is the VEI scale open-ended?

A

Because the index is based on a relative comparison of known eruptions

45
Q

What does an “8” on the VEI scale represent? How about “0”?

A

the largest volcanoes in history given an index of 8. A “0” represents a non-explosive eruption (for example, Hawaiian shield volcanoes) while an “8” represents a mega-colossal explosive eruption.

46
Q

What is the VEI logarithmic scale mainly based on?

A

the volume of ejecta, the height of the eruption column, duration of eruption, and the eruption style

47
Q

What are the eruption styles? How many types are there?

A

Five types. Icelandic type, Vulcanian type, Hawaiian type, Stromblian type, Plinian type

48
Q

Which historic eruption was a VEI 8?

A

The eruption of Lake Toba, in Indonesia in 73,000 BP (before present)

49
Q

Which was the last VEI 7 eruption in the world?

A

eruption in 1815 of Tambora caldera, in Sumatra, Indonesia

50
Q

If Mount Baker had a lahar, where might it enter BC?

How will the lahar flow to the Pacific Ocean?

A

At Sumas, moving down the Nooksack River.

It flows to the ocean via Nooksack River

51
Q

Are volcanic eruptions one of the top 10 natural hazards in BC?

A

No.