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  2. Effusive eruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effusive_eruption

    For an effusive eruption to occur, magma must be permeable enough to allow the expulsion of gas bubbles contained within it. If the magma is not above a certain permeability threshold, it cannot degas and will erupt explosively. Additionally, at a certain threshold, fragmentation within the magma can cause an explosive eruption.

  3. Explosive eruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosive_eruption

    Because the magma is viscous, the bubbles remain trapped in the magma. [2] As the magma nears the surface, the bubbles and thus the magma increase in volume. The pressure of the magma builds until the blockage is blasted out in an explosive eruption through the weakest point in the cone, usually the crater.

  4. Magma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magma

    Magma consists of liquid rock that usually contains suspended solid crystals. [14] As magma approaches the surface and the overburden pressure drops, dissolved gases bubble out of the liquid, so that magma near the surface consists of materials in solid, liquid, and gas phases.

  5. Gas slug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_slug

    A gas slug is a conglomerate of high pressure gas bubbles that forms within certain volcanoes, the agitation of which is a driving factor in Strombolian eruptions. They start out as small bubbles of gas inside of volcanic magma. [1] These accumulate into one large bubble, which starts to rise through the lava plume. Gas slugs also consist of ...

  6. Magmatism along strike-slip faults - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magmatism_along_strike...

    Magmatism along strike-slip faults is the process of rock melting, magma ascent and emplacement, associated with the tectonics and geometry of various strike-slip settings, most commonly occurring along transform boundaries at mid-ocean ridge spreading centres [1] and at strike-slip systems parallel to oblique subduction zones. [2]

  7. Volcanic gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanic_gas

    Depending on the viscosity of the magma, the bubbles may start to rise through the magma and coalesce, or they remain relatively fixed in place until they begin to connect and form a continuously connected network. In the former case, the bubbles may rise through the magma and accumulate at a vertical surface, e.g. the 'roof' of a magma chamber.

  8. Intrusive rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intrusive_rock

    Intrusive rock is formed when magma penetrates existing rock, crystallizes, and solidifies underground to form intrusions, such as batholiths, dikes, sills, laccoliths, and volcanic necks. [1] [2] [3] Intrusion is one of the two ways igneous rock can form. The other is extrusion, such as a volcanic eruption or similar event.

  9. Volcanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanism

    Silica-rich magmas cool beneath the surface before they erupt. As they do this, bubbles exsolve from the magma. As the magma nears the surface, the bubbles and thus the magma increase in volume. The resulting pressure eventually breaks through the surface, and the release of pressure causes more gas to exsolve, doing so explosively.