
Everything Everywhere Daily All About Volcanoes
Feb 1, 2023
Volcanoes are among nature's mightiest forces, capable of massive eruptions that shape our planet. Delve into how tectonic plates and hotspots contribute to their formation, distinguishing between cinder cones, stratovolcanoes, and shield volcanoes. The discussion highlights fascinating examples like Hawaii and Iceland, as well as the colossal Olympus Mons. With over 40 eruptions happening worldwide right now, learn how these geological giants influence climate and even spark mass extinctions throughout Earth's history.
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Volcano Basics Defined
- A volcano is simply an opening that lets magma, gas, ash, and lava reach the surface.
- Magma becomes lava only after it erupts onto the surface.
Plate Boundaries Drive Volcanism
- Most volcanoes form at tectonic plate boundaries where conditions let magma break through the crust.
- Subduction zones, where one plate dives under another, produce the majority of the world's volcanoes.
Water Spurs Melting In Subduction Zones
- Subducting oceanic plates bring water and light materials into the mantle, lowering melting points.
- That process creates magma which then rises to form volcanoes along subduction zones.
