Volcano
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
A volcano is a hole or crack in the crust of a planetary-mass object, like Earth. It lets out hot lava, volcanic ash, and gases from a magma chamber deep below the surface. Volcanoes are often found where tectonic plates are moving apart or coming together. Because many of Earth's plate edges are under the ocean, lots of volcanoes are underwater, like those along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Ring of Fire.
Volcanoes can also form where the Earth's crust is stretching thin, such as in the East African Rift and the Rio Grande rift. Some volcanoes form far from plate edges because of mantle plumes rising from deep inside the Earth. These create hotspots like the Hawaiian hotspot.
Volcanoes are called active, dormant, or extinct. Active volcanoes have erupted recently and might erupt again. Extinct volcanoes no longer have magma. Dormant volcanoes have not erupted for a very long time but might become active again.
Big volcanic eruptions can change Earth's weather. Ash and droplets of sulfuric acid from eruptions can block sunlight. This can cool the troposphere and sometimes cause volcanic winters, which can affect food supplies far away.
Other planets also have volcanoes. For example, Venus and Mars both have many volcanic features. Scientists have even suggested a broader idea of "volcano" that includes processes like cryovolcanism on other worlds.
Etymology and terminology
The word volcano started being used in the early 17th century. It comes from the name of Vulcano, a volcanic island in the Aeolian Islands of Italy. People named it after Vulcan, the god of fire in Roman mythology.
The things that happen around volcanoes are called volcanism. The science that studies volcanoes is named volcanology.
Plate tectonics
Main article: Plate tectonics
The theory of plate tectonics explains how Earth's outer shell, called the lithosphere, is broken into pieces called plates. These plates move slowly because of heat from inside Earth. Most volcanoes form where these plates meet — either coming together or moving apart.
When plates move apart, new crust forms between them, often making underwater volcanoes. When plates come together, one plate can go under another, melting and forming magma that may erupt as volcanoes. There are also places called hotspots, where hot material from deep inside Earth rises to create volcanoes, such as the Hawaiian Islands.
Volcanic features
Further information: Types of volcanoes
A volcano needs three things: a place to store melted rock called magma, a path for the magma to move up, and an opening to let the magma out as lava. The material that comes out, like lava and ash, builds up around the opening and makes the shape of a volcano, often a mountain.
Volcanoes can look different depending on many things. Some have steep sides from thick, slow-moving lava, while others have broad, gentle slopes. Lava and ash can come out from many places on a volcano, not just the top. There are many kinds of volcanoes, including ones made mostly of ash, big flat ones called shield volcanoes, and even ones that form under water or ice. Some volcanoes are very big and can affect the whole world when they erupt.
Erupted material
The material that comes out during a volcanic eruption can be grouped into three main types:
- Volcanic gases, which are mostly steam, carbon dioxide, and sulfur compounds like sulfur dioxide or hydrogen sulfide
- Lava, which is magma that reaches the surface and starts to flow
- Tephra, which are solid pieces of different sizes thrown into the air
Volcanic gases change from volcano to volcano. Water vapour is usually the most common, followed by carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide.
Lava’s behavior depends on its composition. Lava with lots of silica (a type of mineral) is thick and doesn’t flow easily. Lava with less silica is thinner and flows more easily.
Tephra forms when magma bursts apart due to fast-expanding gases. Small pieces, called volcanic ash, can spread far from the volcano and settle on the ground.
Main article: Volcanic gas
Main article: Lava flow
Main article: Tephra
Volcanic eruptions
Main article: Volcanic eruption
Volcanoes can erupt in many different ways. Some eruptions are gentle, while others are very powerful. One way to measure how powerful an eruption is called the volcanic explosivity index. This index ranges from quiet lava flows to huge eruptions that can cover large areas with ash.
Different types of eruptions include Hawaiian eruptions, which are gentle and produce flowing lava. Plinian eruptions are very powerful and can create tall eruption columns and flows of hot rock and gas. Other types include Strombolian, Vulcanian, and Peléan eruptions, each with its own unique features.
Volcanic activity
Volcanoes can be very active, erupting many times a year, or they might only erupt once every tens of thousands of years. Scientists call volcanoes erupting, active, dormant, or extinct, but these words can sometimes overlap.
An erupting volcano lets out magma, or melted rock. An active volcano shows signs like earthquakes, swelling ground, or extra gases, even if it isn’t erupting right now. Dormant volcanoes don’t show these signs but might become active again later. Extinct volcanoes are thought to not erupt again because they no longer have magma. But it can be hard to tell if a volcano is truly extinct or just dormant for a very long time.
Decade volcanoes
Main articles: Lists of volcanoes and Decade Volcanoes
The Decade Volcanoes are 16 special volcanoes chosen for study. They were picked because they have had big eruptions in the past and are close to where people live. These volcanoes are found around the world, including Russia, Mexico, Italy, Colombia, the United States, Indonesia, and Japan.
Scientists watch these volcanoes closely with special tools. This helps them understand when a volcano might erupt again. It also helps keep people safe by giving early warnings.
Volcanoes and humans
Hazards
Main article: Volcanic hazard
Volcanic eruptions can be very dangerous to people. There are many types of eruptions, such as steam explosions, ash clouds, and fast-moving flows of hot rock and gas. These can hurt people and damage things. Volcanic gases can rise high into the sky and change the weather. Ash from eruptions can also be bad for airplanes, as it can damage their engines.
Benefits
Even though eruptions can be dangerous, volcanoes also give us useful things. The rocks from volcanoes are soft and easy to shape, and people have used them to build things for thousands of years. Soil made from volcanic ash is very rich and helps plants grow well. Volcanoes also provide heat that can be used to make electricity. Many people visit volcanoes as tourists, which helps local economies.
Safety considerations
Near places where people live, scientists watch volcanoes very closely. They try to warn people before an eruption happens. Because of this, many lives have been saved. For example, before the big eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991, people were told to leave, and this helped save many lives. It is important for everyone to know what their local authorities do to keep people safe from volcanoes.
Volcanoes on other celestial bodies
See also: List of extraterrestrial volcanoes, Volcanism on the Moon, Volcanism on Mars, Volcanism on Io, and Volcanism on Venus
Our Moon doesn’t have large, active volcanoes today, but it shows signs of past volcanic activity. You can see this in the dark patches called maria, as well as in long, narrow valleys known as rilles and small rounded hills called domes.
The planet Venus has a surface covered mostly with a dark rock called basalt, showing that volcanoes helped shape it long ago. There are wide spreads of melted rock called lava flows, and some kinds of volcanic activity happen there that we don’t see on Earth.
On Mars, there are several huge, extinct volcanoes, including Arsia Mons, Ascraeus Mons, Hecates Tholus, Olympus Mons, and Pavonis Mons. Though these volcanoes have been quiet for millions of years, spacecraft have found clues that Mars might have had volcanic activity more recently.
Jupiter’s moon Io is the most active volcano place we know of in our solar system. It has many volcanoes. Another moon of Jupiter, Europa, shows a different kind of volcanic activity called cryovolcanism, where water freezes on its cold surface.
The moon Triton of Neptune and the moon Enceladus of Saturn also show cryovolcanism, where icy mixtures burst out and freeze again. Scientists think other faraway worlds might have similar icy volcanic activity too.
History of volcano understanding
People have noticed volcanoes for a very long time. Ancient stories from many cultures often linked volcanoes to gods or supernatural events. Some traditions tell of gods living inside mountains.
Over time, people tried to explain volcanoes in different ways. Some thought they were caused by winds or fires deep inside the Earth. Later, scientists learned that volcanic eruptions are tied to the movement of Earth's plates and the heat from inside the planet.
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