Natural effusive geological formation with a rupture in the crust of a planetary-mass object, that allows hot lava, volcanic ash, and gases to escape from a magma chamber out to the surface.
Natural, surface vent or fissure usually in a mountainous form
Natural effusive geological formation with a rupture in the crust of a planetary-mass object, that allows hot lava, volcanic ash, and gases to escape from a magma chamber out to the surface.
Volcanoes occur on the Earth's crust and other planets where magma comes to the surface, releasing various products of volcanism that form hills and mountains.
Terminology
The word "Volcano" comes from the name of the ancient Roman god of fire, Vulcanus (lat. Vulcanus or lat. Volcanus). According to mythology, his workshop was on the island of Vulcano (Italy).
Volcanology is the science that studies volcanoes. Volcanologist - a scientist who studies volcanoes.
Volcanic Activity
The Earth's lithosphere (the planet's rigid outer shell) consists of sixteen larger and several smaller plates. They are in permanent slow motion, due to convection in the underlying ductile mantle. Most of volcanic activity on Earth takes place along plate boundaries, where the lithosphere is being destroyed as the plates are converging or where new lithosphere is being created as are diverging.
Volcanism is most intense in the following geological conditions:
Volcanoes on Earth are divided into two types according to their activity:
Active volcanoes (active) - those that have erupted in historical time or during the Holocene (within the last 10,000 years). Some active volcanoes may be considered dormant, but they can still erupt.
Inactive volcanoes (extinct) are ancient volcanoes that have lost their activity.
There are about 900 active volcanoes on land, in the seas and oceans their number is being specified.
The period of a volcanic eruption can last from a few days to several million years.
Shape Classification
The shape of a volcano depends on the composition of the lava it erupts; five types of volcanoes are usually considered:
The largest areas of volcanic activity on Earth are South America, Central America, Java, Melanesia, the Japanese islands, the Kuril Islands, Kamchatka, the northwestern United States, Alaska, Hawaii, the Aleutian Islands, Iceland, etc.
Volcanoes exist not only on Earth, but also on other planets and their satellites. Martian volcano Olympus, 21.2 km high is the highest mountain in the solar system.
The Jupiter's moon Io has the greatest volcanic activity in the solar system . Plumes of material erupted by volcanoes on Io reach a height of 330 km and a radius of 700 km (Twashtar volcanoes); lava flows reach a length of 330 km (Amirani and Masubi volcanoes).
On some satellites of planets (Enceladus and Triton) in conditions of low temperatures the erupted "magma" consists not of molten rocks, but of water and light substances. This type of eruption cannot be attributed to normal volcanism, so this phenomenon is called cryovolcanism.
Natural, surface vent or fissure usually in a mountainous form