USGS/Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, Washington
Glossary of Volcano and Related Terminology
-
Aa:
- Aa (pronounced "ah-ah" - a Hawaiian term),
is lava that has a rough, jagged, spiny, and generally clinkery surface. In thick aa flows, the rubbly surface of
loose clinkers and blocks hides a massive, relatively dense interior.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
-
Active volcano:
- A volcano that is currently erupting, or has erupted during recorded history.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A volcano that is erupting. Also, a volcano that is not presently erupting but
that has erupted within historical time and is considered likely to do so in the
future (there is no distinction between "active" and "dormant" in this sense).
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Aerosol:
- Fine liquid or solid particles suspended in the atmosphere. Aerosols resulting from volcanic eruptions are tiny
droplets of sulfuric acid -- sulfur dioxide that has picked up oxygen and water.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Airfall:
- Ash falling from an eruption column or ashcloud. (Miller, 1989)
- Volcanic ash that has fallen through the air from an eruption cloud. A deposit so formed is
usually well sorted and layered.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- Also called: ashfall.
-
Andesite:
- Andesite is a gray to black volcanic rock with between about 52 and 63 weight percent silica (SiO2). Andesites contain crystals composed primarily of plagioclase feldspar and one or more of the minerals pyroxene (clinopyroxene and orthopyroxene) and lesser amounts of hornblende. At the lower end of the silica range, andesite lava may also contain olivine. Andesite magma commonly erupts from stratovolcanoes as thick lava flows, some reaching several kilometers in length. Andesite magma can also generate strong explosive eruptions to form pyroclastic flows and surges and enormous eruption columns. Andesites erupt at temperatures between 900 and 1100° C.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Ash (volcanic):
- Fragments less than 2 millimeters (about 1/8 inch) in diameter of lava or rock blasted into the air by volcanic
explosions.
(Teacher's Packet)
- Fragments of lava or rock smaller than 2 millimeters
in size that are blasted into the air by volcanic explosions.
(Miller, 1989)
- Fine pyroclastic material in fragments less than 4.0 millimeters in diameter. "Ash" in this sense
is quite distinct from the ash produced by common combustion because the rocks do not catch fire and burn
during a volcanic event.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Ash cloud:
- The fine material that is generated by a pyroclastic flow and rises above it.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
- Cloud of ash formed by volcanic explosions or derived from a pyroclastic flow.
(Miller, 1989).
-
Ashfall:
-
Ash flow:
- A pyroclastic flow consisting predominantly of ash-sized (less than 4 millimeters in diameter)
particles. Also called
a glowing avalanche if it is of very high temperature.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Atmospheric shock wave:
- Strong compressive atmospheric wave driven by volcanic ejecta.
-
Avalanche:
- A large mass of material or mixtures of material falling or sliding rapidly under the force of
gravity. Avalanches often are classified by their content, such as snow, ice, soil, or rock avalanches.
A mixture of these materials is a debris avalanche.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- See also: Debris avalanche
-
Ballistic fragment:
- An explosively ejected rock fragment that follows a ballistic trajectory.
-
Basalt:
- Basalt is a hard, black volcanic rock with less than about 52 weight percent silica (SiO2). Because of basalt's low silica content, it has a low viscosity (resistance to flow). Therefore, basaltic lava can flow quickly and easily move >20 kilometers from a vent. The low viscosity typically allows volcanic gases to escape without generating enormous eruption columns. Basaltic lava fountains and fissure eruptions, however, still form explosive fountains hundreds of meters tall. Common minerals in basalt include olivine, pyroxene, and plagioclase. Basalt is erupted at temperatures between 1100 to 1250° C.
(USGS/VHP)
- A fine-grained, dark-colored, extrusive igneous rock that forms by the crystallization of lava flows.
(Plank and Schenck, 1998)
-
Base surge:
- Turbulent, low-density cloud of rock debris and water and (or) steam that moves
over the ground surface at high speed. Base surges are generated by explosions.
(Miller, 1989)
-
Black Sand Beach:
- The famous "black sand" beaches of Hawaii
were created virtually instantaneously by the violent interaction between hot
lava and sea water.
(Tilling, 1985)
-
Blocks:
- Tephra is the general term now used by volcanologists
for airborne volcanic ejecta of any
size. Historically, however, various terms have been used to describe ejecta of different sizes.
... Fragments larger than about
2.5 inches are called blocks if they were ejected in a solid state and volcanic
bombs if ejected in semi-solid, or plastic, condition.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
- Fragments of lava or rock larger than 64 millimeters in size that are blasted into the
air by volcanic explosions.
(Miller, 1989)
- See: Tephra.
-
Blowdown:
- Trees felled by a volcanic blast.
-
Bombs:
- Tephra is the general term now used by volcanologists
for airborne volcanic ejecta of any
size. Historically, however, various terms have been used to describe ejecta of different sizes.
... Fragments larger than about
2.5 inches are called blocks if they were ejected in a solid state and volcanic
bombs if ejected in semi-solid, or plastic, condition. ... Volcanic bombs undergo
widely varying degrees of aerodynamic shaping, depending on their fluidity, during the flight
through the atmosphere. Based on their shapes after they hit the ground, bombs are variously
described, in graphic terms, as "spindle or fusiform,", "ribbon", "bread-crust", or "cow-dung".
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
- See: Tephra.
-
Bread-crust bombs:
-
Caldera:
- A caldera is a large, usually circular depression at the summit of a volcano formed when magma is withdrawn or erupted from a shallow underground magma reservoir. The removal of large volumes of magma may result in loss of structural support for the overlying rock, thereby leading to collapse of the ground and formation of a large depression. Calderas are different from craters, which are smaller, circular depressions created primarily by explosive excavation of rock during eruptions.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Cenozoic:
- An era of geologic time from the beginning of the Tertiary period,
spanning the time between 65 million years ago to the present. The Cenozoic
contains the Tertiary and the Quaternary periods.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Cinders:
- Cinders are lava fragments
about 1 centimeter (about 1/2 inch) in diameter.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Cinder cone:
- A steep-sided volcano formed by the explosive eruption of cinders that form around a vent.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A small conical-shaped volcano formed by the accumulation of ejected cinders and
other volcanic debris that falls back to Earth close to the vent area.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Composite volcano:
- A steep-sided volcano built by lava flows and tephra deposits.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A steep-sided volcano composed of many layers of volcanic rocks, usually of
high-viscosity lava and fragmented debris such as lahar and pyroclastic deposits.
(Brantley, 1994)
- Composite volcanoes erupt episodically over tens to hundreds of thousand of years and can display a wide
range of eruption styles. See also Monogenetic volcanoes.
(Walder, et.al., 1999)
- Also called: Stratovolcano
-
Conduit (volcanic):
- A subterranean passage through which magma reaches the surface during volcanic
activity.
-
"Continental" Volcanoes:
- In the typical "continental" environment, volcanoes are located in unstable,
mountainous belts that have thick roots of granite or granitelike rock. Magmas, generated
near the base of the mountain root, rise slowly or intermittently along fractures in the
crust. During passage through the granite layer, magmas are commonly modified or changed in
composition and erupt on the surface to form volcanoes constructed of nonbasaltic rocks.
(Tilling, 1985)
-
Contour lines:
- Parallel lines used on topographic maps to show the shape and elevation of the land. They connect points of equal
elevations.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Crater:
- The circular depression containing a volcanic vent.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A steep-sided, usually circular depression formed by either explosion or
collapse at a volcanic vent.
-
Crust:
- The Earth's outermost layer.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Dacite:
- Dacite lava is most often light gray, but can be dark gray to black. Dacite lava consists of about 63 to 68 percent silica (SiO2). Common minerals include plagioclase feldspar, pyroxene, and amphibole. Dacite generally erupts at temperatures between 800 and 1000° C. It is one of the most common rock types associated with enormous Plinian-style eruptions. When relatively gas-poor dacite erupts onto a volcano's surface, it typically forms thick rounded lava flow in the shape of a dome.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Debris avalanche:
- A rapid and unusually sudden sliding or flowage of unsorted masses of rock and other material. As
applied to the major avalanche involved in the eruption of Mount St. Helens (1980), a rapid mass movement
that included fragmented cold and hot volcanic rock, water, snow, glacier ice, trees, and some hot
pyroclastic material. Most of the May 18 deposits in the upper valley of the North Fork Toutle River and
in the vicinity of Spirit Lake are from the debris avalanche.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- The very rapid and usually sudden sliding and flowage of an unsorted mixture of
soil and weathered (altered) rock
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
- Moves away from a volcano at high speed.
-
Debris flow:
- A flowing mixture of water and rock debris, sometimes referred to as a lahar (originating at a volcano) or
mudflow.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
- See also: Lahar.
-
Density Current:
- A gravity-induced flow of one current through, over, or
under another fluid media, owing to density differences.
Factors affecting density differences include temperature,
salinity, and concentration of suspended particles.
(AGI Glossary of Geology)
-
Deposit:
- Earth material that has accumulated by some natural process. For example, a
flowing mixture of water and rock debris is called a debris flow, but when the
flow ceases to move, a layer of fine and coarse rock is left which is called a
debris-flow deposit.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Diatreme:
- A general term for a volcanic vent or pipe drilled through enclosing rocks (usually flat-lying
sedimentary rocks) by the explosive energy of gas-charged magmas. The diamond-bearing kimberlite
pipes of South Africa are diatremes.
(Dict.Geological Terms, 1962)
-
Dike:
- A tabular igneous body that cuts across the planar structures of the surrounding
rocks.
-
Diorite:
- A coarse, uniformly grained rock composed of a feldspar and
less than 50% amphibole or pyroxene. A quartz diorite has the
composition of a diorite plus quartz and biotite, whereas a granodiorite
has the composition of a diorite plus quartz and two
feldspars. An intrusive igneous rock.
(Plank and Schenck, 1998)
-
Directed blast:
- A hot, low-density mixture of rock debris, ash, and gases that moves at high
speed along the ground surface. Directed blasts are generated by explosions.
(Miller, 1989)
-
Dome:
- A steep-sided mount that forms when very viscous lava is extruded from a volcanic vent.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A steep-sided mound that forms when viscous lava piles up near a volcanic vent.
Domes are formed by andesite, dacite, and rhyolite lavas.
(Brantley, 1994)
- A steep-sided mass of viscous (doughy) lava extruded from a volcanic vent, often circular in plan
view and spiny, rounded, or flat on top. Its surface is often rough and blocky as a result of
fragmentation of the cooler, outer crust during growth of the dome.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- Also called: Lava dome.
-
Dormant volcano:
- An active volcano that is in repose (quiescence) but is expected to erupt in the future.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A volcano that is not presently erupting but that is considered likely to erupt
in the future.
(Foxworthy and Hill)
-
Earthquake:
- The abrupt shaking of the ground caused by an abrupt shift of rock along a
fracture in the Earth.
-
Ejecta:
- Material that is thrown out by a volcano, including pyroclastic material
(tephra) and, from some volcanoes, lava bombs.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Eocene:
- An epoch of the Tertiary period, spanning the time between 54.8 and 33.7
million years ago.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Extinct volcano:
- A volcano that is not expected to erupt again.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A volcano that is not presently erupting and is not likely to do so for a very
long time in the future.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Fumarole:
- A vent that releases volcanic gases, including water vapor (steam).
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
- An opening at the Earth's surface from which water vapor and other gases are emitted, often at
high temperature.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- An vent or opening in the ground from which hot water vapor (steam)
and (or) volcanic gases are emitted.
-
Fumarolic activity
- Volcanic gas emissions, that may be accompanied by a change in the temperature of
the gases or fluids emitted.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Gabbro:
- A coarse-grained rock composed of greenish-white feldspar
(mostly plagioclase) and pyroxene. Gabbro is usually very dark
in color. It is the intrusive equivalent of basalt.
An intrusive igneous rock.
(Plank and Schenck, 1998)
-
Geologic Time Scale
-- to: Geologic Time Scale
-
Glaciers:
-- to: Glossary of Glacier Terminology
-
Glacier outburst flood:
- A sudden release of melt water from a glacier or glacier-dammed lake sometimes
resulting in a catastrophic flood, formed by melting of a channel or by
subglacial volcanic activity.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Graben:
- An elongate crustal block that is relatively depressed (downdropped) between two
fault systems.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Granite:
- Igneous rocks are formed from melted rock that has cooled and solidified.
When rocks are buried deep within the Earth, they melt because of
the high pressure and temperature; the molten rock (called magma) can then
flow upward or even be erupted from a volcano onto the Earth's
surface. When magma cools slowly, usually at depths of thousands of feet,
crystals grow from the molten liquid, and a coarse-grained rock
forms. When magma cools rapidly, usually at or near the Earth's surface,
the crystals are extremely small, and a fine-grained rock results.
A wide variety of rocks are formed by different cooling rates and different
chemical compositions of the original magma. Obsidian (volcanic
glass), granite, basalt, and andesite porphyry are four of the many types of igneous rock.
(Barker, 1997)
- A coarse-grained, light-colored rock composed of quartz and
two feldspars (plagioclase and orthoclase), with lesser amounts
of mica or amphibole. An intrusive igneous rock.
(Plank and Schenck, 1998)
-
Harmonic Tremor:
- Continuous rhythmic earthquakes in the Earth's upper lithosphere that
can be detected by seismographs. Harmonic tremors
often precede or accompany volcanic eruptions.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A continuous release of seismic energy typically associated with the underground
movement of magma. It contrasts distinctly with the sudden release and rapid
decrease of seismic energy associated with the more common type of earthquake
caused by slippage along a fault.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Hawaiian eruption:
- "Hawaiian" eruptions may occur along fissures or fractures that serve as
linear vents, such as during the eruption of Mauna Loa Volcano
in Hawaii in 1950, or they may occur at a central vent such as
during the 1959 eruption in Kilauea Iki Crater of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii.
In fissure-type eruptions,
molten, incandescent lava spurts from a fissure on the volcano's rift zone and
feeds lava streams that flow downslope. In central-vent eruptions, a fountain
of fiery lava spurts to a height of several hundred feet or more. Such lava may
collect in old pit craters to form lava lakes,
or form cones, or feed radiating flows. (Tilling, 1985)
-
Holocene:
- An epoch of the Quaternary period, spanning
from 10,000 years ago until the present.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Hot Spot:
- An area in the middle of a lithospheric plate where magma rises from the mantle and erupts at the Earth's surface.
Volcanoes sometimes occur above a hot spot.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Hummocky ground:
- A ground surface that has lots of small hills and swales; uneven ground.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Hydrothermal:
- Pertains to hot water or the action of heated water, often considered heated by
magma or in association with magma.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Hydrothermal alteration:
- Alteration of rocks or minerals by the reaction of hot water (and other fluids)
with pre-existing rocks. The hot water is generally heated groundwater and
dissolved minerals.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Igneous:
- Solidified from a magma; also applied to processes related to the formation of
igneous rocks.
-
Igneous rocks:
-
Igneous rocks are formed from melted rock that has cooled and solidified. When rocks are buried deep within the Earth, they melt because of
the high pressure and temperature; the molten rock (called magma) can then flow upward or even be erupted from a volcano onto the Earth's
surface. When magma cools slowly, usually at depths of thousands of feet, crystals grow from the molten liquid, and a coarse-grained rock
forms. When magma cools rapidly, usually at or near the Earth's surface, the crystals are extremely small, and a fine-grained rock results.
A wide variety of rocks are formed by different cooling rates and different chemical compositions of the original magma. Obsidian (volcanic
glass), granite, basalt, and andesite porphyry are four of the many types of igneous rock.
(Barker, 1997)
-
"Island Arc" Volcanoes:
- In a typical "island-arc" environment, volcanoes lie along the crest of an arcuate,
crustal ridge bounded on its convex side by a deep oceanic trench. The granite or granitelike
layer of the continental crust extends beneath the ridge to the vicinity of the trench.
Basaltic magmas, generated in the mantle beneath the ridge, rise along fractures through the
granitic layer. These magmas commonly will be modified or changed in composition during
passage through the granitic layer and erupt on the surface to form volcanoes built largely of
nonbasaltic rocks.
(Tilling, 1985)
-
Jökulhlaup:
- Icelandic term for Glacial outburst floods
-
K-Ar dating:
- Determination of ;the age of a mineral or rock in years based on the known
radioactive decay rate of potassium-40 to argon-40.
-
Lahar:
- A flowing mixture of water-saturated rock debris
that forms on the slopes of a volcano, and moves downslope under the force
of gravity,
sometimes referred to as debris flow or mudflow.
The term comes from Indonesia.
-
Lahar-runout flow:
- Hyperconcentrated streamflow transitional in sediment concentration between a
lahar and normal streamflow.
-
Lapilli:
- Fragments of lava or rock between 2 and 64 millimeters in size that are blasted into the
air by volcanic explosions.
(Miller, 1989)
- Rock fragments between 2 and 64 mm (0.08-2.5 in) in diameter that were ejected from a volcano during an explosive eruption are called lapilli. Lapilli (singular: lapillus) means "little stones" in Italian. Lapilli may consist of many different types of tephra, including scoria, pumice, and reticulite.
Rounded tephra particles in this size range are called accretionary lapilli if they consist of tiny ash grains stuck together. Ash sometimes form such rounded particles in an eruption column or cloud, owing to moisture or electrostatic forces.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Lateral blast:
- A sideways-directed explosion from the side or summit of a volcano.
(Teacher's Packet)
- An explosive event in which energy is directed horizontally instead of
vertically as in an eruption column.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Lava:
- The term used for magma once it has erupted onto the Earth's surface.
(Teacher's Packet)
- Molten rock that erupts from a vent or fissure.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
- See also: Magma
-
Lava dome:
-
Lava flow:
- Stream of molten rock that erupts relatively nonexplosively from a volcano and
moves slowly downslope.
(Miller, 1989)
- An outpouring of lava onto the land surface from a vent or fissure.
Also, a solidified tonguelike or sheetlike body formed
by outpouring lava.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Lava lake:
- Another common lava product is the ponded flow or lava lake.
The surface of lava that is
ponded is smooth, broken only by polygonal cooling cracks,
formed in much the same way as shrinkage cracks in mud
that has been dried by the sun. ... The formation of the lava lake's
solid crust by cooling can be compared to the
formation of a sheet of ice on top of a body of water during a winter freeze.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
-
Lava tube:
- During long-lived eruptions, lava flows
tend to become "channeled" into a few main streams. Overflows of lava from
these streams solidify quickly and plaster on to the channel walls, building
natural levees or ramparts that allow the level of the lava to be
raised. Lava streams that flow steadily in a confined channel for many hours to
days may develop a solid crust or roof and thus change gradually into streams
within lava tubes. Because the walls and roofs of such tubes are good
thermal insulators, lava flowing through them can remain hot and fluid much
longer than surface flows. Tube-fed lava can be transported for great distances
from the eruption sites.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
-
Lithic (volcanic):
- Pertains to pyroclastic deposits that contain abundant fragments of
previously-formed rocks and/or dense fragments.
-
Lithospheric Plates:
- A series of rigid slabs (16 major ones at present) that make up the Earth's
outer shell. These plates float on top of a softer, more plastic layer in the
Earth's mantle.
(Teacher's Packet)
- Also called: Tectonic Plates.
-
Loess:
- A well-sorted deposit of windblown silt-sized particles that forms a blanket
over the landscape.
-
Maars:
- Also called "tuff cones", maars are shallow, flat-floored craters formed above diatremes as a result of a violent expansion of magmatic gas or steam. Maars range in size from 200 to 6,500 feet across and from 30 to 650 feet deep, and most are commonly filled with water to form natural lakes.
(Tilling, 1985)
- A maar is a low-relief, broad volcanic crater formed by shallow explosive eruptions. The explosions are usually caused by the heating and boiling of groundwater when magma invades the groundwater table. Maars often fill with water to form a lake.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Mafic:
- Term used to describe volcanic rock or magma composed chiefly of dark-colored,
iron- and magnesium-rich minerals.
(Miller, 1989)
-
Mafic volcano:
- Mafic volcanoes typically erupt for brief time intervals (weeks to perhaps centuries),
but some can grow almost as large as composite volcanoes. Subsequent eruptions in the region typically
issue from new vents and, over tens to hundreds of thousands of years, build broad fields of many volcanoes.
(Scott, et.al., 2001)
-
Magma:
- Molten rock containing liquids, crystals, and dissolved gases that forms within the upper part of the Earth's mantle
and crust. When erupted onto the Earth's surface, it is called lava.
(Teacher's Packet)
- Molten rock that contains dissolved gas and minerals. When magma reaches the surface it is called lava.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Magnetic polarity:
- Direction of magnetic poles (either normal or reversed) preserved in igneous
rocks after they cool through their Curie temperatures.
-
Magnitude:
- A numerical expression of the amount of energy released by an earthquake,
determined by measuring earthquake waves on standardized recording instruments
(seismographs). The number scale for magnitudes is logarithmic rather than
arithmetic; therefore, deflections on a seismograph for a magnitude 5 earthquake, for example, are 10
times greater than those for a magnitude 4 earthquake, 100 times greater than for a magnitude 3
earthquake, and so on.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Mantle:
- A zone in the Earth's interior between the crust and the core that is 2,900 kilometers (1,740 miles) thick. (The
lithosphere is composed of the topmost 65-70 kilometers (39-42 miles) of mantle and the crust).
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Mesozoic:
- The era of geologic time between the Paleozoic and the Cenozoic, spanning the
time between 248 and 65 million years ago. The Mesozoic is dividing into
the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Metamorphic rocks:
- Sometimes sedimentary and igneous rocks are subject to pressures so intense or heat so high that they are completely changed. They
become metamorphic rocks, which form while buried within the Earth's crust. The process of metamorphism does not melt the rocks, but instead
transforms them into denser, more compact rocks.
(Barker, 1997)
-
Miocene:
- An epoch of the Tertiary period, spanning the time between 23.8 and 5.3
million years ago.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Monogenetic volcano:
- Monogenetic volcanoes typically erupt for only brief time intervals -- weeks to perhaps centuries -- and
generally display a narrower range (as compared to composite volcanoes) in eruptive
behavior. Most monogenetic volcanoes are basaltic in composition.
(Walder, et.al., 1999)
-
Mudflow:
- The flowing mixture of water and debris (intermediate between a volcanic avalanche and a water flood) that forms on the
slopes of a volcano. Sometimes called a debris flow or lahar, a term from Indonesia where volcanic mudflows are
a major hazard.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A flowage of water-saturated earth material possessing a high degree of fluidity during movement.
A less-saturated flowing mass is often called a debris flow. A mudflow originating on the flank of
a volcano is properly called a lahar.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- See: Lahar.
-
Nuees Ardente:
See: Pyroclastic Flow.
See: Pelean eruption.
-
Obsidian:
- Obsidian is dense volcanic glass, usually rhyolite in composition and typically black in color. Compared with window glass, obsidian is rich in iron and magnesium; tiny (<.005 mm) crystals of iron oxide within the glass cause its dark color.
Obsidian is often formed in rhyolite lava flows where the lava cools so fast that crystals do not have time to grow. Glass, unlike crystals, has no regular structure and therefore fractures in smooth conchoidal (curved) shapes. The intersections of these fractures can form edges sharper than the finest steel blades. For this reason, obsidian was used by many native cultures to make arrowheads and blades.
(USGS/VHP)
-
"Oceanic" Volcanoes:
-
In a typical "oceanic" environment, volcanoes are alined along the crest of a broad ridge that
marks an active fracture system in the oceanic crust. Basaltic magmas, generated in the upper
mantle beneath the ridge, rise along fractures through the basaltic layer. Because the
granitic crustal layer is absent, the magmas are not appreciably modified or changed in
composition and they erupt on the surface to form basaltic volcanoes.
(Tilling, 1985)
-
Oligocene:
- An epoch of the Tertiary period, spanning the time between 33.7 and 23.8 million
years ago.
-
Pahoehoe:
- Pahoehoe (pronounced "pah-hoy-hoy" - a Hawaiian term), is lava that in solidified form is characterized by a smooth, billowy, or ropy surface.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
- Pahoehoe is a Hawaiian term for basaltic lava that has a smooth, hummocky, or ropy surface. A pahoehoe flow typically advances as a series of small lobes and toes that continually break out from a cooled crust. The surface texture of pahoehoe flows varies widely, displaying all kinds of bizarre shapes often referred to as lava sculpture.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Paleocene:
- An epoch of the Tertiary period, spanning the time between 65 and 54.8 million
years ago.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Paleozoic:
- An era of geologic time, from the end of the Precambrian to the beginning
of the Mesozoic, spanning the time between 543 and 248 million years ago. The
Paleozoic era contains the
Cambrian,
Ordovician,
Silurian,
Devonian,
Mississippian,
Pennsylvanian, and
Permian periods.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Pegmatite:
-
An igneous rock with very large (usually > one inch), well-formed crystals. A granitic pegmatite has the mineralogy of a granite and abnormally large grains, whereas a gabbroic pegmatite has the mineralogy of a gabbro and very large grains. An intrusive igneous rock.
(Plank and Schenck, 1998)
-
Pelean eruption:
- In a "Pelean" or "Nuee Ardent" (glowing cloud) eruption, such as
occurred on the Mayan Volcano in the Philippines in 1968,
a large quantity of
gas, dust, ash, and incandescent lava fragments are blown out of a central
crater, fall back, and form tongue-like, glowing avalanches that move down-slope
at velocities as great as 100 miles per hour. Such eruptive activity can cause
great destruction and loss of life if it occurs in populated areas, as
demonstrated by the devastation of St. Pierre during the 1902 eruption of
Mount Pelee on Martinique, West Indies. (Tilling, 1985)
-
Phreatic eruption:
- An explosion of steam, water, mud, and other material.
May result from heating of groundwater by magma, and may generate base surges.
(Miller, 1989)
- A type of volcanic explosion that occurs when water comes in contact with hot
rocks or ash near a volcanic vent, causing steam explosions.
(Brantley, 1994)
- An explosive volcanic eruption caused when water and heated volcanic rocks interact to produce a
violent expulsion of steam and pulverized rocks. Magma is not involved.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- The eruption of Taal Volcano in the Philippine Islands in 1965 typifies
"Phreatic" (or steam-blast) behavior. Here, a great column of steam,
dust, ash, and cinders is blasted to a height of several thousand feet. This
type of violent eruption is believed to occur when a large quantity of ground
or surface water comes in contact with hot rock or magma in a volcanic vent and
is instantly and explosively flashed to steam.
(Tilling, 1985)
-
Phreatomagmatic eruption:
- An explosion composed of magmatic gases and steam derived from groundwater or
surface water, combined with lava and other debris.
(Miller, 1989)
-
Pillow Lava:
- Fluid lava erupted or flowing under water may form a special structure called
pillow lava. Such structures form when molten lava breaks through the thin walls of underwater tubes, squeezes out
like toothpaste, and quickly solidifies as irregular, tongue-like protrusions. This process is repeated countless
times, and the resulting protrusions stack one upon another as the lava flow advances underwater. The term
pillow comes from the observation that these stacked protrusions are sack- or pillow-shaped in cross
section. Typically ranging from less than a foot to several feet in diameter, each pillow has a glassy outer skin
formed by the rapid cooling of the lava by water. Much pillow lava is erupted under relatively high pressure
created by the weight of the overlying water; there is little or no explosive interaction between hot lava and cold
water. The bulk of the submarine part of a Hawaiian volcano is composed of pillow lavas.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
-
Pleistocene:
- An epoch of the Quaternary period, spanning the time between 1.8 million years ago
and the beginning of the Holocene at 10,000 years ago.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Pliocene:
- An epoch of the Tertiary period, spanning the time between 5.3 and 1.8 million years
ago.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Pluton:
- Pertaining to igneous rock bodies that form at great depth.
-
Precambrian:
- All geologic time before the Paleozoic era. This includes about 90% of all
geologic time and spans the time from the beginning of the earth to 543 million
years ago.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Ponded flow:
-
Pumice:
- A light-colored, frothy
volcanic rock, usually of dacite or rhyolite composition, formed by the expansion of gas in erupting lava.
Commonly perceived as lumps or fragments of pea size and larger but can also
occur abundantly as ash-size particles.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- Because of its numerous gas bubbles, pumice commonly floats on water.
-
Pyroclastic:
- Pertaining to fragmented (clastic) rock material formed by a volcanic explosion
or ejection from a volcanic vent.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
-
Pyroclastic flow:
- A hot, fast-moving and high-density mixture of fine and coarse particles and gas formed during explosive
eruptions or from the collapse of a lava dome.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
- Lateral flowage of a turbulent mixture of hot gases and unsorted pyroclastic material (volcanic
fragments, crystals, ash, pumice, and glass shards) that can move at speed (50 to 100 miles an hour). The
term also can refer to the deposit so formed.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- A hot (300-800 degrees C (570-1470 degrees F)),
dry, fast-moving
(10 to more than 100 meters per second (20 to more than 200 miles per hour))
and high-density mixture of ash, pumice, rock fragments, and
gas formed during explosive eruptions or from the collapse of a lava dome.
Moves away from a volcano at high speeds.
-
Pyroclastic surge:
- Similar to a pyroclastic flow but of much lower density (higher gas to rock
ratio).
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
- Turbulent, low-density cloud of hot rock debris and gases that moves over the
ground surface at high speed.
-
Quaternary:
- Period of geologic time from about 1.8 million years ago until the present.
It contains the
Pleistocene and Holocene epochs.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Reticulite:
- During the exceptionally high fountaining episodes of some eruptions,
an extremely vesicular, feathery light pumice, called reticulite or
thread-lace scoria, can form and be carried many miles downwind from the high
lava fountains. Even though reticulite is the least dense kind of tephra, it does not
float on water, because its vesicles are open and interconnected. Consequently, when it
falls on water, it becomes easily waterlogged and sinks.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
-
Rhyolite:
- Volcanic rock (or lava) that characteristically is light in color, contains 69 percent silica or
more, and is rich in potassium and sodium.
(Foxworthy and Hill, 1982)
- Rhyolite is a light-colored rock with silica (SiO2) content greater than about 68 weight percent. Sodium and potassium oxides both can reach about 5 weight percent. Common mineral types include quartz, feldspar and biotite and are often found in a glassy matrix. Rhyolite is erupted at temperatures of 700 to 850° C.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Satellite vent:
- A secondary vent of flank vent at a volcanic center.
-
Scoria:
- Scoria is a vesicular (bubbly) glassy lava rock of basaltic to andesitic composition ejected from a vent during explosive eruption. The bubbly nature of scoria is due to the escape of volcanic gases during eruption. Scoria is typically dark gray to black in color, mostly due to its high iron content. The surface of some scoria may have a blue iridescent color; oxidation may lead to a deep reddish-brown color.
(USGS/VHP)
- Scoria forms when blobs of gas-charged lava are thrown into the air during an eruption and cool in flight, falling as dark volcanic rock containing
cavities created by trapped gas bubbles.
(Clynne, et.al., 1998)
-
Seismicity:
- Pertaining to earthquakes or earth vibration.
-
Seismograph:
- A scientific instrument that detects and records vibrations (seismic waves)
produced by earthquakes.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Shield volcano:
- A volcano that resembles an inverted warrior's shield. It has long gentle slopes produced by multiple eruptions of
fluid lava flows.
(Teacher's Packet)
- A volcano shaped like an inverted warrior's shield with long gentle slopes
produced by eruptions of low-viscosity basaltic lava.
(Brantley, 1994)
-
Silica:
- The molecule formed of silicon and oxygen (SiO2) that is the basic building
block of volcanic rocks and the most important factor controlling the fluidity
of magma. The higher a magma's silica content, the greater its viscosity or
"stickiness."
(Brantley, 1994)
-
Silicic:
- Term used to describe silica-rich volcanic rock or magma.
(Miller, 1989)
-
Spatter Cone:
- Long-lived basaltic lava fountains that erupt spatter, scoria or cinder, and other tephra from a central vent typically build steep-sided cones called spatter-and-cinder cones. The greatest bulk of these cones consists of spatter, but during fountaining a lava flow usually pours down one side of the cone. Eruptions that build spatter and cinder cones are much longer in duration and much more varied in intensity than those that eject only spatter to build spatter cones and ramparts.
(USGS/VHP)
-
Spreading Ridges:
- Places on the ocean floor where lithospheric plates separate and magma erupts.
About 80 percent of the Earth's volcanic activity occurs on the ocean floor.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Stratovolcano:
-
Strombolian eruption:
- In a "Strombolian"-type eruption
observed during the 1965 activity of
Irazu Volcano in Costa Rica,
huge clots of molten lava burst form the summit crater to
form luminous arcs through the sky. Collecting on the flanks of the cone, lava
clots combined to stream down the slopes in fiery rivulets. (Tilling, 1985)
-
Subduction Zone:
- The place where two lithosphere plates come together, one riding over the other.
Most volcanoes on land occur parallel to and inland from the boundary between
the two plates.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Tectonic:
- Pertaining to the forces involved in the deformation of the Earth's crust, or
the structures or features produced by such deformation.
-
Tectonic Plates:
See: Lithospheric Plates.
-
Tephra:
- Solid material of all sizes explosively ejected from a volcano into the atmosphere.
(Teacher's Packet)
- Tephra is the general term now used by volcanologists for airborne volcanic ejecta of any
size. Historically, however, various terms have been used to describe ejecta of different sizes. Fragmental volcanic products between 0.1 to about 2.5 inches in diameter are called lapilli; material finer than 0.1 inch is called ash. Fragments larger than about 2.5 inches are called blocks if they were ejected in a solid state and volcanic bombs if ejected in semi-solid, or plastic, condition.
(Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987)
- See: Ash, Lapilli, Blocks, Bombs.
-
Tertiary:
- Period of geologic time from about 65 million years ago until 1.8 million years ago. It contains the
Paleocene,
Eocene,
Oligocene,
Miocene, and
Pliocene epochs.
(GSA 1999 Geologic Timescale)
-
Thread-lace scoria:
-
Topographic map:
- A map that uses contour lines to represent the three-dimensional features of a landscape on a two-dimensional surface.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Tremor:
-
Tuff:
- Volcanic rock made up of rock and mineral fragments in a volcanic ash matrix. Tuffs commonly are composed of much shattered volcanic rock glass--chilled magma blown into the air and then deposited. If volcanic particles fall to the ground at a very high temperature, they may fuse together, forming a welded tuff.
(Geology in the Parks Website, 2006)
-
Tuff Cones:
Tuya:
- A volcano that erupted under a glacier.
(British Columbia Ministry of Environment, Lands & Parks, 2000)
- A tuya is a volcano that erupts initially beneath a glacier, melts through the ice, and
develops an upper, subaerial part, which commonly consists of a flat-to0ped form capped by a
lava flow.
(Hammond, 1987)
VEI Scale:
- Some scientists recently proposed the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI)
to attempt to standardize the assignment of the relative size of
an explosive eruption, using ejecta volume as well as the
other criteria mentioned earlier. The VEI scale ranges from 0 to 8. A VEI of 0
denotes a nonexplosive eruption, regardless of volume of erupted products.
Eruptions designated a VEI of 5 or higher are considered
"very large" explosive events, which occur worldwide
only on an average of about once every 2 decades. The May 1980 eruption of
Mount St. Helens rated a VEI of 5, but just barely;
its lateral blast was powerful, but its output of magma was rather small. The VEI has
been determined for more than 5,000 eruptions in the last 10,000 years. None of these eruptions rates the maximum VEI of 8. For
example, the eruption of Vesuvius Volcano in A.D. 79,
which destroyed Pompeii and Herculaneum, only rates a VEI of 5. Since A.D.
1500, only 22 eruptions with VEI 5 or greater have occurred:
one VEI 7 (the 1815 Tambora eruption), four of VEI 6 (including
Krakatau in 1883), and seventeen of VEI 5
(counting Mount St. Helens in 1980 and El Chichon, Mexico, in 1982). Considered barely
"very large," the eruption of Mount St. Helens in May 1980
was smaller than most other "very large" eruptions within the past 10,000
years and much smaller than the enormous caldera-forming
eruptions-which would rate VEI's of 8-that took place earlier than 10,000.
(Tilling, et.al., 1990)
-
Vent:
- The opening at the Earth's surface through which volcanic materials (lava, tephra, and gases) erupt.
Vents can be at a volcano's summit or on its slopes; they can be
circular (craters) or linear (fissures).
(Teacher's Packet)
- An opening in the Earth's surface through which volcanic materials (magma and
gas) escape.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Vesuvian eruption:
- In a "Vesuvian" eruption, as typified by the eruption of
Mount Vesuvius in Italy in A.D.79, great quantities of
ash-laden gas are violently discharged to
form a cauliflower-shaped cloud high above the volcano. (Tilling, 1985)
-
Viscosity:
- Measure of the fluidity of a substance. Taffy and molasses are very viscous; water has low viscosity.
(Teacher's Packet)
- Basalt is less viscous than dacite.
-
Volcano:
- A vent (opening)
in the surface of the Earth through which magma erupts;
it is also the landform that is constructed by the erupted material.
(Teacher's Packet)
-
Volcanic avalanche:
- A large, chaotic mass of soil, rock, and volcanic debris moving swiftly down the
slopes of a volcano. Volcanic avalanches can also occur without an eruption as
a result of an earthquake; heavy rainfall; or unstable soil, rock, and volcanic
debris.
(Teacher's Packet)
- Also called: Debris Avalanche.
-
Volcanic bombs:
-
Volcanic cone or edifice:
- Used to describe the uppermost slopes and summit area of a volcano.
(Gardner, et.al., 1995)
-
Volcanic fields:
-
Volcanic landslide:
- The downslope movement of soil, rock debris, and sometimes glacial ice, with or
without water, from the flank of a volcano.
(Brantley, 1994)
- See: Debris Avalanche.
-
Vulcanian eruption:
- The eruptive activity of Paricutin Volcano in 1947
demonstrated a
"Vulcanian"-type eruption, in which a dense cloud of ash-laden gas
explodes from the crater and rises high above the peak. Steaming ash forms a
whitish cloud near the upper level of the cone. (Tilling, 1985)
- Barker, 1997,
Collecting Rocks:
USGS General Interest Publication
- Brantley, 1994,
Volcanoes of the United States:
USGS General Interest Publication
- British Columbia Ministry of Environment, Lands & Parks Website, 2000
- Clynne, et.al., 1998,
How Old is "Cinder Cone"? -- Solving a Mystery in Lassen Volcanic
National Park, California:
USGS Fact Sheet 173-98
- Dictionary of Geological Terms, 1962,
Prepared under the direction of the American Geological Institute,
Dolphin Books, Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City, New York
- Foxworthy and Hill, 1982,
Volcanic Eruption of 1980 at Mount St. Helens: The First 100 Days:
USGS Professional Paper 1249
- Gardner, et.al., 1995,
Potential Volcanic Hazards from Future Activity of Mount Baker, Washington:
USGS Open-File Report 95-498
-
Geology in the Parks Website, 2006, U.S. National Park Service and the U.S. Geological Survey
- Geological Society of America (GSA) Website, 2006, Geologic Timescale (1999).
- Hammond, P.E., 1987,
Lone Butte and Crazy Hills: Subglacial volcanic complexes, Cascade Range,
Washington:
IN: Hill, M.L., (ed.), 1987, Geological Society of America Centennial
Field Guide Volume 1, Cordilleran Section of the Geological Society of America.
- Hoblitt, et.al., 1987,
Volcanic Hazards with Regard to Siting Nuclear-Power Plants in the Pacific
Northwest:
USGS Open-File Report 87-297
- Miller, 1989,
Potential Hazards from Future Volcanic Eruptions in California:
USGS Bulletin 1847
- Margaret O. Plank and William S. Schenck, 1998,
Delaware Piedmont Geology: Delaware Geological Survey,
University of Delaware, Delaware Geological Survey Website, July 2001;
- Scott, et.al., 2001,
Volcano Hazards in the Three Sisters Region, Oregon:
USGS Open-File Report 99-437
- Tilling, 1985
Volcanoes: U.S. Geological Survey General Interest Publication
- Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987,
Eruptions of Hawaiian Volcanoes: Past, Present, and Future:
USGS General Interest Publication
- Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990,
Eruptions of Mount St. Helens: Past, Present, and Future:
USGS General Interest Publication
- U.S. Geological Survey,
Volcano Hazards Program Website, Photo Glossary
- U.S. Geological Survey: VOLCANO! Teacher's Packet, 1997
- U.S. Geological Survey, Paleontology HomePage, 1997,
http://geology.er.usgs.gov/paleo/
- Walder, et.al., 1999,
Volcano Hazards in the Mount Jefferson Region, Oregon:
USGS Open-File Report 99-24, 14p.
- Wolfe and Pierson, 1995,
Volcanic-Hazard Zonation for Mount St. Helens, Washington, 1995:
USGS Open-File Report 95-497
URL for CVO HomePage is:
<http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/home.html>
URL for this page is:
<http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/volcano_terminology.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact:
<GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
08/14/06, Lyn Topinka