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Causes of Volcanoes

Causes of Volcanoes. Pgs. 156 - 161. Formation of Magma. The key to understanding why volcanoes form is understanding how magma forms. Magma collects in the deeper regions of the Earth’s crust and upper layer of the mantle.

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Causes of Volcanoes

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  1. Causes of Volcanoes Pgs. 156 - 161

  2. Formation of Magma • The key to understanding why volcanoes form is understanding how magma forms. • Magma collects in the deeper regions of the Earth’s crust and upper layer of the mantle. • When it collects it is a zone of intensely hot and pliable rock beneath the crust. • Think of silly putty as a reference to the pliability of the magma.

  3. Pressure and Temperature of Magma • Why doesn’t the temperature of the mantle make all the rock melt? • Pressure. • The pressure of the rock above the mantle forces particles of the rock to pack together tightly, preventing them from becoming liquid. • Magma will form when the temperature increases enough or the pressure decreases enough. • Since the mantle’s temperature is fairly constant, decreases in pressure is the main cause of magma formation.

  4. Density and Magma • Once magma is formed, it will rise toward the surface because its density is less than the rock above it. • Magma will contain both liquid and solid minerals, but is still less dense. • It will rise to the surface like bubbles in a pot of boiling water.

  5. Where Volcanoes Form • A large number of volcanoes lie directly on plate tectonic boundaries. • There are so many plate boundaries in the Pacific Ocean that the active volcanoes surrounding it gave it the nickname the Ring of Fire. • Where plates collide or separate are places where magma can travel upward through the crust easiest. • This is why plate boundaries have so many volcanoes.

  6. Separating Tectonic Plates • At divergent boundaries, plates separate and form a rift where the mantle rises to fill the gap. • When the mantle is exposed to the surface, pressure drops and magma will form. • Magma is less dense than the rock around and it will rise to the surface. • As it continues to be exposed, magma stays liquid because the pressure continues to drop with less rock on top of it. • Separation usually occurs on the ocean floor creating mid-ocean ridges.

  7. Colliding Tectonic Plates • At convergent boundaries between oceanic and continental crust, the denser oceanic crust will move underneath the continental. • This movement is called subduction and the area where this happens is called a subduction zone. • The oceanic crust sinks into the mantle and gets heated to melt. • The magma is now less dense than the rock around it and will rise to the surface under the continental crust.

  8. Hot Spots • Some magma doesn’t form around tectonic boundaries. • The Hawaiian Islands formed from what’s called a hot spot. • These are areas directly above columns of rising magma, called mantle plumes. • Deep within the Earth is where mantle plumes originate and rise toward the surface. • Scientists don’t know the exact cause of them, but believe the heat from the core and radioactive elements keep them rising.

  9. Effects of Hot Spots • Hot spots will produce chains of volcanoes over time. • The mantle plume stays in its spot, but the tectonic plates above it will continue to move. • As they move, the mantle plume will continue allow magma to rise and form volcanoes.

  10. Predicting Volcanic Eruptions • Scientists have classified volcanoes on how likely they will erupt based on their histories of eruptions. • Extinct volcanoes: those that have not erupted in recorded history and may never erupt again. • Dormant volcanoes: those that are not currently erupting, but have in recorded history. • Active volcanoes: those that are in the process of erupting or show signs of erupting in the near future.

  11. Measuring Small Quakes • Using a seismograph, scientist can try to determine when a volcano will erupt. • Most active volcanoes produce small earthquakes as magma moves up toward the surface. • The frequency and intensity of the quakes increases just before an eruption.

  12. Measuring Slope • Scientists can help predict eruptions using a tiltmeter. • Some volcanoes will bulge in areas, affecting its slope, before an eruption. • A tilt meter can be used to detect these changes on the volcano’s slope.

  13. Measuring Volcanic Gases • Scientists can use the ratio of sulfur dioxide to carbon dioxide to help predict eruptions. • When the ratio of these two gases changes, an eruption is coming, because this indicates a change in the magma chamber below. • Collecting these gases can be dangerous, because it requires you to climb the volcano and collect poisonous material. • Appropriate precautions must be taken.

  14. Measuring Temperature from Orbit • Satellite images can even help predict volcanic eruptions. • Using infrared radiation can pick up temperature changes of active volcanoes. • Drastic increases in temperature indicate that magma is rising to the surface.

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