SLIDE 17 Slide 97 / 107 Where do Volcanoes Form?
Divergent Plates As the plates break apart, it leaves an opening for the hot magma to emerge as lava. Despite being underwater, these rifts release an incredible amount
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Slide 98 / 107 Types of Volcanoes
Volcanoes are categorized in three different ways: Active, Extinct, or
- Dormant. (Click the stars to learn more!)
Active Volcanoes: Extinct Volcanoes: Dormant Volcanoes:
Currently erupting or are likely to erupt; have erupted in the recent past; usually showing unusual activity. Considered unlikely to erupt again; no more magma supply. Still could erupt, but has not done so in a very long time.
Slide 99 / 107 Volcanic Eruptions - Mt Vesuvius
There have been a number of instances throughout history of cities and regions being destroyed by volcanic eruptions. One of the most famous eruptions was that of Mount Vesuvius in Italy in 79 AD. When Mount Vesuvius erupted, it buried and destroyed the Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum.
Slide 100 / 107 Pompeii
Like many Roman cities, Pompeii was very advanced. It had a complex water system (including sewage), an amphitheater, a gymnasium and a
- port. It also had paved roads and many temples to the Roman gods.
We know so much about Pompeii today because when Vesuvius erupted, it practically "froze" the city in time. The features listed above, as well as living creatures, were instantly covered in 4-6 meters of volcanic ash. Only upon being excavated more than 1,000 years later did we learn anything more about Pompeii.
The cast of a dog that was covered in ash Theater at Pompeii A paved road in Pompeii
Slide 101 / 107 Volcanic Eruptions - Mount St. Helens
The resulting blast was so violent, it blasted out the side of the volcano, killing 57 individuals, including scientists studying the volcano. It also caused one of the largest landslides in history. More recently, the United States experienced the eruption of Mount
Washington in 1980.
Slide 102 / 107 Mount St. Helens
The eruption of Mount St. Helens released a large amount of ash and gas into the atmosphere. Like most volcanoes, water vapor was released as well as carbon dioxide (CO
2) and sulfur gases, such as sulfur
dioxide (SO
2).
The eruption also had an affect on our country's wallet: it is estimated that the blast cost an estimated $1.1 billion in clean-up (equal to about $2.7 billion today!)