When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lava dome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lava_dome

    In volcanology, a lava dome is a circular, mound-shaped protrusion resulting from the slow extrusion of viscous lava from a volcano. Dome-building eruptions are common, particularly in convergent plate boundary settings. [1] Around 6% of eruptions on Earth form lava domes. [1]

  3. List of lava domes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lava_domes

    Lava domes are common features on volcanoes around the world. Lava domes are known to exist on plate margins as well as in intra-arc hotspots, and on heights above 6000 m and in the sea floor. [ 1 ] Individual lava domes and volcanoes featuring lava domes are listed below.

  4. Pancake dome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancake_dome

    Pancake domes have a broad, flat profile similar to shield volcanoes and are thought to form from one large, slow eruption of viscous silica-rich lava. [1] They usually have a central pit- or bowl-like feature similar to a volcanic crater, but it is thought that these pits form after the eruption as the lava cools and emits gas rather than being a vent from which the lava originated.

  5. Dome (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dome_(geology)

    A dome is a feature in structural geology where a circular part of the Earth's surface has been pushed upward, tilting the pre-existing layers of earth away from the center. In technical terms, it consists of symmetrical anticlines that intersect each other at their respective apices .

  6. Volcano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcano

    A volcano needs a reservoir of molten magma (e.g. a magma chamber), a conduit to allow magma to rise through the crust, and a vent to allow the magma to escape above the surface as lava. The erupted volcanic material (lava and tephra) that is deposited around the vent is known as a volcanic edifice, typically a volcanic cone or mountain. [2] [22]

  7. Mono–Inyo Craters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mono–Inyo_Craters

    The Inyo volcanic chain form much of the southern part of the chain and consist of phreatic explosion pits, and rhyolitic lava flows and domes. The southernmost part of the chain consists of fumaroles and explosion pits on Mammoth Mountain and a set of cinder cones south of the mountain; the latter are called the Red Cones .

  8. Effusive eruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effusive_eruption

    Effusive eruption differs from explosive eruption, wherein magma is violently fragmented and rapidly expelled from a volcano. Effusive eruptions are most common in basaltic magmas, but they also occur in intermediate and felsic magmas. These eruptions form lava flows and lava domes, each of which vary in shape, length, and width. [2]

  9. Mountain formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_formation

    A hotspot volcano is center. [8] Movements of tectonic plates create volcanoes along the plate boundaries, which erupt and form mountains. A volcanic arc system is a series of volcanoes that form near a subduction zone where the crust of a sinking oceanic plate melts and drags water down with the subducting crust. [9]