Dictionary Definition
eruption
Noun
1 the sudden occurrence of a violent discharge of
steam and volcanic material [syn: volcanic
eruption]
2 symptom consisting of a breaking out and
becoming visible
3 (of volcanos) pouring out fumes or lava (or a
deposit so formed) [syn: eructation, extravasation]
4 a sudden violent spontaneous occurrence
(usually of some undesirable condition); "the outbreak of
hostilities" [syn: outbreak, irruption]
6 the emergence of a tooth as it breaks through
the gum
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ɪˈɹʌpʃən/, /I"r\VpS@n/
Noun
Translations
- Croatian: erupcija
- Finnish: purkaus (1)
- French: eruption
- German: Eruption, Ausbruch, Vulkanausbruch
- Italian: eruzione
- Spanish: erupción
Extensive Definition
In this article types of eruption will be used to
refer to the mechanism causing the eruption. The style of eruption
will be used to describe subcategories of eruption, which have the
same eruptive mechanism. For example strombolian and vulcanian are
two eruptive styles, but they are the same type. The styles of
volcanic eruption are often named after famous volcanoes where characteristic
behavior has been observed. Some volcanoes may exhibit only one
characteristic type of eruption during an interval of
activity—others may display an entire sequence of types.
Types
There are three mechanisms of ash formation: gas release under decompression causing magmatic eruptions; thermal contraction from chilling on contact with water causing phreatomagmatic eruptions and ejection entrained particles during steam eruptions causing phreatic eruptions (Heiken & Wohletz 1985).Magmatic Eruptions
Magmatic Eruptions produce juvenile clasts during explosive decompression from gas release. They range in size from the realtively small fire fountains on Hawaii to >30 km Ultra Plinian eruption columns, bigger than the eruption that buried Pompeii. (Heiken & Wohletz 1985)Strombolian
Strombolian
eruptions are named because of activity of Stromboli in
Sicily. They
are characterised by huge clots of molten lava bursting from the summit crater to
form luminous arcs through the sky. Collecting on the flanks of the
cone, lava clots combine to stream down the slopes in fiery
rivulets. The explosions are driven by bursts of gas slugs that
rise faster than surrounding magma.http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/317/5835/227
Vulcanian
Vulcanian
eruptions are named after Vulcano, following
Giuseppe
Mercalli's observations of its 1888-1890 eruptions. Another
example was the eruption of Parícutin in
1947. They are characterised by a dense cloud of ash-laden gas
exploding from the crater and rising high above the peak. Steaming
ash forms a whitish cloud near the upper level of the cone.
Peléan
In a Peléan
eruption or nuée
ardente (glowing cloud) eruption, such as occurred on the
Mayon
Volcano in the Philippines in
1968, a large
amount of gas, dust, ash, and lava fragments are blown out of a
central crater, fall back, and form avalanches that move downslope
at speeds as great as 160 km per hour. Such eruptive activity can
cause great destruction and loss of life if it occurs in populated
areas, as demonstrated by the devastation of Saint-Pierre
during the 1902 eruption of
Mont
Pelée on Martinique,
Lesser
Antilles.
Hawaiian
Hawaiian eruptions may occur along fissures or fractures that serve as vents, such as during the eruption of Mauna Loa Volcano in Hawaii in 1950. Also, they can occur at a central vent, such as during the 1959 eruption in Kilauea Iki Crater of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii. In fissure-type eruptions, lava shoots from a fissure on the volcano's rift zone and feeds lava streams that flow downslope. In central-vent eruptions, a fountain of lava is erupted to a height of several hundred metres or more. Such lava may collect in old pit craters to form lava lakes, or form cones, or feed radiating flows.Plinian
Plinian eruptions are usually the most powerful, and involve the explosive ejection of relatively viscous lava. Large plinian eruptions — such as during 18 May 1980 at Mount St. Helens or, more recently, during 15 June 1991 at Pinatubo in the Philippines — can send ash and volcanic gas tens of kilometres into the atmosphere. The resulting ash fallout can affect large areas hundreds of miles downwind. Fast-moving pyroclastic surges and pyroclastic flows together with “nuées ardentes,” are often associated with plinian eruptions.Phreatomagmatic Eruptions
Phreatomagmatic eruptions are the result of thermal contraction from chilling on contact with water. The products of phreatomagmatic eruptions are beliave to have more regular shard shapes and be finer grained than the products of magmatic eruptions because of the different eruptive mechanism. There is debate about the exact nature of the eruptive style. Fuel-coolant reactions may be more critical to the explosive nature than thermal contraction (Starostin et al 2004). . Fuel coolant reactions fragment the material in contact with a coolant by propagating stress waves widening cracks and increasing surface area leading to rapid cooling rates and explosive thermal contraction (Heiken & Wohletz 1985).Subglacial
Subglacial eruptions are named because of activity under ice, or under a glacier. They can cause dangerous floods, lahars, and create hyaloclastite and pillow lava. Only five of these types of eruptions have occurred in the present day.Phreato-plinian
On January, 2008, the British Antarctic Survey (Bas) scientists led by Hugh Corr and David Vaughan, reported (in the journal Nature Geoscience) that 2,200 years ago, a volcano erupted under Antarctica ice sheet (based on airborne survey with radar images). The biggest eruption in the last 10,000 years, the volcanic ash was found deposited on the ice surface under the Hudson Mountains, close to Pine Island Glacier.Phreatic Eruptions
Phreatic
eruptions (or steam-blast eruptions) are driven by explosive
expanding steam resulting from cold ground or surface water coming
into contact with hot rock or magma. The distinguishing feature of
phreatic explosions is that they only blast out fragments of
pre-existing solid rock from the volcanic conduit; no new magma is
erupted. Phreatic activity is generally weak, but has been known to
be strong, such as the 1965 eruption of
Taal
Volcano, Philippines,
and the 1975-1976 activity at
La
Soufrière, Guadeloupe
(Lesser
Antilles).
External links
- Volcanic Eruption Guide for children and youth
- USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) accessed June 19, 2007.
References
Heiken, G. & Wohletz, K. 1985. Volcanic Ash. University of California Press, Berkeley.Starostin, A. B., Barmin, A. A. & Melnik,
O.E. 2005. A transient model for explosive and phreatomagmatic
eruptions. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 143,
133-151.
Pyle, D. M. 1989. The thickness, volume and
grainsize of tephra fall deposits. Bulletin of Volcanology, 51,
1-15.
Riley, C. M., Rose, W. I. & Bluth, G.J.S.
2003. Quantitive shape measurements of distal volcanic ash. Journal
of Geophysical Research, 108, B10, 2504.
Notes
eruption in German: Vulkanausbruch
eruption in Estonian: Vulkaanipurse
eruption in Spanish: Erupción volcánica
eruption in French: Éruption volcanique
eruption in Friulian: Eruzion
eruption in Korean: 분화
eruption in Croatian: Erupcija
eruption in Italian: Eruzione vulcanica
eruption in Swahili (macrolanguage): Mlipuko wa
volkeno
eruption in Dutch: Eruptie
eruption in Japanese: 噴火
eruption in Polish: Erupcja wulkanu
eruption in Portuguese: Erupção
eruption in Romanian: Erupţie vulcanică
eruption in Slovak: Typy sopečných
erupcií
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
access,
belch, blaze, blaze of temper, blowout, blowup, breaking out, burst, cascade, convulsion, cyclone, debouchment, diaper rash,
discharge, disgorgement, dissiliency, drug rash,
efflorescence,
ejaculation,
emission, eructation, explosion, expulsion, extravasation, fit, flare, flare-up, gale, gush, gust, heat rash, high words,
hives, hurricane, irruption, jet, nettle rash, outbreak, outburst, outpour, papular rash, paroxysm, prickly heat,
rapids, rash, rupia, rush, sally, scene, seizure, skin eruption, spasm, spate, spew, spout, spouting, spurt, squirt, storm, tempest, tornado, torrent, upheaval, urticaria, vaccine rash,
volcan, whirlwind