A volcano is an opening in the surface of
the Earth from which magma (molten subsurface rock ) and associated gases
and ash erupt; also, the form or structure, sometimes conical, that is produced by
the ejected material. Volcanic activity may create vast plateaus where flood basalts emerge from cracks,
covering the surface with massive flows of lava (molten rock
above the surface) and subsequently dissected by streams.
Common to all volcanoes is a
magma chamber. The magma
chamber is a huge, subterranean caldron of molten rock that is
less dense than the surrounding rock and rises buoyantly, sometimes under great
pressure to the surface. The main conduit through which magma moves toward the surface
is
the central vent. A crater
sits at the top of a volcano and is the location where much of the lava, gas,
rock fragments and ash are ejected from.
Figure 16.1
Mt. St. Helenslast major eruption left the huge crater seen
in the center of the photograph.Courtesy
USGS CVO
Lateral vents are found on
the sides of some volcanoes where lava is extruded. An extremely large crater is some
times found at the summit of a volcano. These massive craters called
calderas, are created when pressure builds inside the volcano until the top
is literally
blown off, magma drains back into the central vent and the top
of the cone collapses in.
Crater lake formed in the caldera of Mount Mazama.
Figure 16.2 Watch "Crater Lake" courtesy of Britannica
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For Citation: Ritter, Michael E.
The Physical Environment: an Introduction to Physical Geography.
Date visited. https://www.earthonlinemedia.com/ebooks/tpe_3e/title_page.html
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