Lava Flows
Lava Features
Volcanic Landforms
Random
100

The ability of a fluid to resist flow.

Viscosity

100

A Volcano that is currently erupting or "awake"

Active

100

A Volcano that is not currently erupting but may erupt again in the future. A sleeping/hibernating Volcano.

Dormant

100

A volcano that has not erupted in recorded history and will likely not erupt again.

Extinct

200

A lava flow that is low viscosity and creates a ropey texture when cooled.

Pahoehoe

200

A volcano that is very large with gentle sloping sides created from many non-explosive eruptions.

Shield Volcanos

200

A small pit at the top of a volcano

Crater

200

An eruption that is calm and consistent, mainly of lava flow

Non-explosive

300

Lava flow that is high in viscosity and has a jagged texture, often makes a clinking sound

A'a

300

When lava is cooled rapidly underwater, resulting in round formations

Pillow Lava

300

A very large pit at the top of a volcano that is the result of a massive & explosive eruption or collapse. Yellowstone is an example

Caldera

300

A violent eruption that launches volcanic material into the air.

Explosive

400

A lava flow that creates very large, solid chunks and is very viscous.

Blocky

400

A large, flat plain created from layers of cooled lava.

Lava Plateau

400

A small, steep sided, short lived volcano made out of pyroclastic material

Cinder Cone

400

A volcano that is the result of both explosive and non-explosive eruptions. These are often times the ones in the history books for their awe inspiring power and destruction.

Strato-volcanos or "composite" volcanos (Mount St. Helens, Mount Vesuvius in Pompei)

500

An eruption of ash and dust that is 700 degrees Celsius and goes 200 km/hr

Pyroclastic Flow

500

When a large amount of magma is launched into the air and hardens as it falls.

Volcanic Bomb

500

The horseshoe shaped area around the Pacific Plate where 75% of our planet's volcanos and 90% of its earthquakes can be found.

The Ring of Fire

500

When ice melts as a result of a volcanic eruption, creating mud that flows downhill and destroys everything in its path.

Mudflow, or the scarier word, LAHAR

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