Characteristics of a Volcano
- A volcano is formed when magma erupts onto the Earth's surface as lava through a vent in the Earth's crust
- The magnitude of a volcanic eruption is measured on the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI):
- The scale is open-ended but the highest in recorded human history was an 8 (Tambora 1815)
- All volcanoes have features in common, as shown in the diagram below:
Volcano characteristics
- Volcanic eruptions may include a range of features such as the ones listed in the table below
Features of an eruption
Feature |
Characteristics |
Lava |
When magma erupts to the surface it is known as lava. The lava can be thin and runny or thick and slow moving. This depends on the composition of the magma |
Ash |
Ash is pulverised solid lava that measures less than 2mm in diameter. It is ejected into the atmosphere and can travel thousands of kilometres |
Earthquakes |
Magma rising to the surface through the vents in the volcano increases pressure on the Earth's crust, leading to earth tremors |
Volcanic bombs |
These are fragments of molten rock that are ejected from the volcano. They are between 60mm and 5m in diameter |
- Due to the different types of eruption and lava, the formation of a volcano varies
Composite volcanoes
- Composite (strato-volcanoes):
- Steep-sided
- Sticky (viscous) lava
- More explosive eruptions
- Formed from alternating layers of ash and lava
- Tend to form on convergent (destructive) plate boundaries
Composite volcano
Shield volcanoes
- Shield volcanoes:
- Gently sloping sides
- Runny/thin lava
- Less explosive – gentle eruptions
- Tend to form on divergent (constructive) plate boundaries or hot spots
- Frequent eruptions
Shield volcano
Cinder volcanoes
- Cinder volcanoes are:
- Circular and cone shaped
- Usually less than 1000 feet high
- Composed of hardened ash, tephra and lava
- The lava is forcefully ejected from the volcano and cools whilst in the air, falling as cinder fragments