This is measured by the Richter Scale.
What is magnitude?
Most of the active volcanoes in the United States are located here.
What is the Ring of Fire
The type of volcano with gentle slopes made from basalt.
What is a shield volcano?
Seismic waves that cause the most damage at Earth's surface.
What are surface waves.
This is the type of volcano shown in this picture.
What is a Composite Volcano?
The Modified Mercalli scale measures this.
What is the damage done by an earthquake?
Volcanoes form when magma
a. flows through the crust.
b. changes in composition.
c. hardens beneath the surface.
What is
a. flows through the crust.
Pumice is a type of rock that is created by volcanic eruptions with large amounts of this, which leaves holes in the rock.
What is dissolved gas?
Forms when meltwater mixes with mud and ash on the mountain.
What are mudflows?
This is the depth where secondary waves stop.

What is around 2,500km?
Which earthquake waves travel faster, P-Waves or S-Waves?
What are P-Waves?
Magma that is rich in gases will form a volcano
A. that erupts explosively.
B. with gently sloping sides.
C. whose lava has a low viscosity.
What is
A. that erupts explosively.
A small, steep-sided volcano made of basalt.
What is a cinder cone?
This is the name for a scientist that studies earthquakes.
What is a Seismologist?
According to this diagram, this is the area where most earthquakes occur.

What are active plate boundaries/The Ring of Fire?
2 plate boundaries where volcanoes can form
What is convergent and divergent.
This type of plate boundary makes the largest volcanoes.
What is a Convergent Plate Boundary?
Term used to describe the resistance of flowing- explosive volcanic eruptions have molten material that is "high" in this.
What is viscosity?
The presence of dissolved _________ in lava increases its explosiveness.
What are gases?
This is the landform shown in this photograph.
What is a Caldera?
Seismic waves originate here.
What is the focus?
When a plate moves over a plume in the mantle creating a volcano NOT located at a plate boundary.
What is a hot spot?
Volcanoes that erupt rhyolitic or andesitic lava are explosive because the lava is high in this.
What is silica?
A break in Earth's lithosphere where one block of rock moves toward, away from, or past another.
What is a fault?
This is the lag time in seconds that indicates a distance of 900km from the epicenter
What is 120 seconds?
Measures the total energy released by an earthquake.
What is the moment magnitude scale?
Large and explosive volcanic eruptions can change climate because ash and gas that erupt high into the atmosphere can do this.
What is reflect sunlight?
Difference between magma and lava
What is magma is below the surface and lava is above Earth's surface
How seismologists locate an epicenter of an earthquake.
What is through triangulation:
1. Measure time from P-waves to S-waves
2. Calculate distance on a speed graph
3. graph 3 points and locate where they all intersect
This is the distance from the epicenter where the difference in travel time between p waves and s waves is about 8 minutes

what is 8,000km?