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Most lava eruptions occur under ocean (where plates move apart) |
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very hot, undersea geysers produced when seawater goes down through cracks and gets superheated color: from iron sulfide minerals |
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non explosive eruption of basalt lava flow i.e. Hawaiian volcanoes (intraplate type of volcano) |
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one of the most throughly studied volcanoes because it is extremely active and almost alwayss quiet outpourings of lava that can be destructive type: shield volcano |
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geysers due to build-up of gas pressure |
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long crack that forms away from central crater |
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underground river of lava, allows lava to travel much greater distances before cooling; eventually they can empty + be underground cavity. |
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smooth, ropey surface due to low viscosity from high temperature + high gas content |
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very rough, jaggeed surface due to higher viscosity from lower temperature + gas content; moves very slowly |
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subduction volcano ... lg portion exploded away (may 18,2980) |
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consists entirely of pyroclastic debris of all shapes + sizes (no lava flow) small, symmetrical cones + usually with short lifespans |
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bulbous mass of extremely viscous lava that accumulates around vent, which can get plugged, potential for extremely explosive eruption. |
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rare, but violent eruption that produces huge crater start as composite cone |
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SW Pacific, caldera forming eruption |
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SW Oregen created Crater Lake |
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destroyed Late Minoan civilization (lost city of atlantis) |
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form wen hot jet streams of water are heated by magma |
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highly porous volcanic rock |
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heat from shallow magma used to generate electricity |
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usually non-lethal but can cause considerable damage |
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dangerous for obvious reasons (kills crops, livestock, ruins buildings) |
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magma eruptiong explosively will be sent vertically and flows down the side of the volcano with great speed also common during caldera forming eruptions |
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mixture of water, volacnic debris that is deposited into the rivers and valleys |
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volcanic eruptions rarely create tsunamis |
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water is major gas release during eruptions sulfer bearing gases can be oxidized to sulfuric acid and ve highly corrosive |
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mass wasting + landslides |
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downslope movement of rock and sediment that occurs at earth's surface in response to gravity |
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flow: turbulent movement of sediment slide/slip: earth material moves as coherent block in contact with slope. fall: earth material moves as free fall (out of contact with slope) |
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flow:Speed ranges from imperceptibly slow (creep) to extremely fast (avalanche). Creep is very slow (few mm per year), continuous downslope movement of rock or sediment. Process involves outward expansion of earth + downward contraction of earth. complex: Slumps/rotational slide/earthflow have combinations of different characteristics. Upslope portion moves as coherent mass (i.e., slide) + produces cliff. Downslope portion flows + has rolling surface. Failure surface is curved in cross-section + spoon-shaped in map view |
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weight of slope material (from gravity) that pulls it downward |
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shear strength (amount of sideward directed force needed to cause failure) that holds slope in place. |
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calculating safety factor (SF): |
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SF = Resisting Forces/Driving Forces (R/D) |
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translational slide (common for bedrock) |
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rotational slide (common for soil) |
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What factors lead to slope stability or instability? |
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Slope weight - instability can result from either natural processes or human-induced processes that add "driving mass" to slope Slope angle - > slope angle = less stable slope. Slope angle can change from human intervention Geologic material - earth materials with low shear strength are susceptible to failure. Sediment is generally weaker than rock + clay is typically very weak Water - important factor in nearly all landslides. > weight (driving force) by filling pore space Vegetation - plant roots > soil cohesion (+ therefore > shear strength), making slope more stable. Volcanic eruptions or earthquakes |
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Landslide Mitigation Before Building |
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Mapping + Zoning (by engineering geologist) - need detailed maps of known landslide areas Building Codes - Regulations to ensure good construction practice, such as requirements for drainage, soil compaction, slope angle (< 27°), + dealing with planes of weakness. |
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Landslide Mitigation Before or After Building (Control + Stabilization) |
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involve < driving force (<slope weight) or > resisting force (strengthening rock/soil) or both. Water drainage - don't allow water to build up within slope (< weight + > shear strength); install horizontal plastic pipes that drain water from within slope, surface drains, or impermeable seals on top of slope (prevent infiltration).
Proper grading of slope - remove material from top of landslide (< driving force) + place it at toe of landslide (> resisting force). Retaining walls - steel-reinforced concrete wall at vertical face to strengthen slope (> resisting force); need holes in wall for drainage;
Regrowing vegetation
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(sinking of Earth's surface, typically irreversible process |
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Slow - involves gradual compaction of sediment caused by withdrawal of subsurface fluid (groundwater or oil); usually affects large areas + is entirely human-induced process; usually recognized only after reaches advanced stage (due to gradual nature of its effects) Rapid - involves abrupt lowering of more localized land area; commonly associated with collapse of land over underground cavity. |
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Principles - rapid subsidence |
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Coal mining - involves human-constructed cavity (underground coal mine) Sinkholes circular depressions (commonly water-filled) usually in limestone (dolomite, less commonly) bedrock + in other soluble bedrock such as marble, gypsum + halite (geologically uncommon) |
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daily fluctuations in temperature, wind speed, + precipitation |
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envelope of gases surrounding Earth |
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troposphere where all weather phenomena occur stratosphere which contains ozone (O3) layer |
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form when air rises (experiences < temperature + < ability to hold water vapor); air eventually becomes fully saturated with water vapor + undergoes condensation |
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amount of water vapor an air mass can hold, which depends on temperature; hot air can hold MUCH more water vapor |
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increasing (>) temperature = > atomic vibration; change from solid --> liquid + from liquid --> gas involves large > in atomic vibration + requires large > in heat |
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olar air = cool, tropical air = hot, air formed over ocean = wet, air formed over continent = dry; they move from west to east due to Earth's rotation |
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