explain defferent types of volcanic land forms
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Volcanic landforms
Volcanic eruptions result in the formation of landforms and here we are going to discuss volcanic landforms.
Intrusive Forms
The lava that is discharged during volcanic eruptions on cooling develops into igneous rocks.
The cooling may take place either on arriving on the surface or also while the lava is still in the crustal portion.
According to the location of the cooling of the lava, igneous rocks are categorized as plutonic rocks and volcanic rocks.
The lava that cools inside the crustal portions takes diverse forms. These forms are called intrusive forms.
Some of the forms are shown in Figure given below
Batholiths
Batholiths are the cooled portion of magma chambers.
It is a large body of magmatic material that cools in the deeper depth of the crust molds in the form of large domes.
They appear on the surface only after the denudation processes eliminate the overlying materials.
These are granitic bodies.
Laccoliths
These are large dome-shaped intrusive bodies with a level base and linked by a pipe-like channel from below.
It bears a similarity to the surface volcanic domes of the composite volcano, only these are located at deeper depths.
It can be considered as the localized source of lava
The Karnataka plateau is patterned with dome hills of granite rocks.
Lopolith
When the lava moves upwards, a part of the same tends to move in a horizontal direction wherever it finds a weak plane.
It can get rested in various forms. If it develops into a saucer shape, concave to the sky body, it is called lopolith.
Phacolith
It is a wavy mass of intrusive rocks found at the base of synclines or the top of the anticline in the folded igneous country.
These wavy materials have a definite outlet to source beneath in the form of magma cavities.
Sills
The near horizontal bodies of the intrusive igneous rocks are called sill
The thick horizontal deposits are called sills whereas the thinner ones are called sheets.
Dykes
Dykes are the most commonly found intrusive forms in the western Maharashtra area.
When the lava makes its channel through cracks and the fissures, it solidifies almost perpendicular to the ground.
This gets cooled in the same position to grow a wall-like structure. Such structures are known as dykes.
These are regarded as the feeders for the eruptions that led to the development of the Deccan traps.
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