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2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009

2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

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Page 1: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

2. Shield volcanoesDan Barker March 2009

Page 2: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping lavaflows. Profiles are upwardly convex. The height of a shield volcano is commonly only 5% of the basal diameter, and slopes range from less than 10° to 25°. The lavas of shield volcanoes are typically basaltic, but unusually low-viscosity (high temperature?) andesite and trachyte make up some shield volcanoes. Lavas dominateover pyroclastic deposits in the preserved section, but much ash could have blown away.

Page 3: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Thin lava flows make up this section of a 13,000 yr-old shield volcano, Asbyrgi,Iceland.

Page 4: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Stratigraphy of the Rana Kau shield volcano, Rapa Nui

Page 5: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Mauna Loa, on the Big Island of Hawaii, is the largest volcano on Earth (Mars has bigger ones).

Page 6: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Viewed from neighboring Mauna Kea, multiple lava flows are visible on Mauna Loa's flank.

Page 7: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Mauna Kea, viewed from Hilo, has a more lumpy appearance because of many scoria cones that formed after the shield-building activity was over(Mauna Kea is older than Mauna Loa).

Page 8: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

The flanks of West Maui volcano are notably steeper than those of its neighbors.

Page 9: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Haleakala, also on Maui, has a more gentle profile.

Page 10: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Like many other large shield volcanoes, Haleakala has a rift zone marked by small craters and scoria cones. Rift zones mark the courses of dikes thatradiate from the summits along topographic divides on the shields.

Page 11: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Eruptions can occur either in a summitcaldera or on the flanks, where theyare fed by magma moving laterallythrough dikes.Studies of eroded shield volcanoes show that intrusive rock (dikes and sills) can make up to a third of a shield's volume.In spite of gentle slopes, shield volcanoesare gravitationally unstable, and large-scale failure of flanks has recently beenrecognized through study of the sea flooraround the Hawaiian Islands.

Page 12: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Holei Pali, a fault scarp on the south flank of Kilauea, where parts of the shield are slumping off. Lava flows run down the scarp.

Page 13: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

In the Galapagos Islands, shield volcanoes such as Fernandina tend to have steeper slopes close to the top, like inverted soup plates. The cause for this difference is still debated by volcanologists.

Page 14: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

At first glance, Hekla in Iceland looks more like an overturned boat than a warrior's shield.That is because it has grown from many eruptions within a long fissure.

Page 15: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Another view of Hekla shows a more convincing shield profile. Note the broad apron of ash in the foreground; it was blown away before it could contribute to the pile to make a stratovolcano.

Page 16: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Trolladyngja is the largest shield volcano in Iceland, even though Hekla is more impressive.

Page 17: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Mauna Ulu ("Growing Mountain") is a shield that grew in the 1970s on the flank of Kilauea.

Page 18: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Longonot, Kenya, is a trachyte shield volcano in the East African Rift.

Page 19: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Newberry volcano, OR, is a large shield volcano capped by rhyolite.

Page 20: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

Appearances can be deceiving. Mt Washington in Oregon is a shield volcano, although glaciation has removed much of it.

Page 21: 2. Shield volcanoes Dan Barker March 2009. Shield volcanoes form when repeated eruptions from the same magma conduit system build piles of overlapping

The 732nd most popular tourist destination in Idaho, this is a small basalt shield on the Snake River Plain.