Geography, asked by lshaanSeal, 1 month ago

Give a name of a dome volcano, and a cone volcano.​

Answers

Answered by tathagatabandy52
1

Explanation:

An eruption of highly viscous (very sticky) magma tends to produce steep-sided volcanoes with slopes that are about 30–35°. That's because the viscous volcanic material doesn't flow that far from where it is erupted, so it builds up in layers forming a cone-shaped volcano known as a stratovolcano.

Answered by karthikdodamani2004
0

Answer:

That's because the viscous volcanic material doesn't flow that far from where it is erupted, so it builds up in layers forming a cone-shaped volcano known as a stratovolcano. Shield volcanoes, on the other hand, have gentle slopes that are less than 10° and erupt more fluid lavas called basalt.

Viscosity is important in volcanology. An eruption of highly viscous (very sticky) magma tends to produce steep-sided volcanoes with slopes that are about 30–35°. That’s because the viscous volcanic material doesn’t flow that far from where it is erupted, so it builds up in layers forming a cone-shaped volcano known as a stratovolcano. Shield volcanoes, on the other hand, have gentle slopes that are less than 10° and erupt more fluid lavas called basalt. When a shield volcano erupts, the basalt can flow great distances away from the vent to produce broad, gentle slopes.

Where a volcano produces low viscosity, runny lava, it spreads far from the source and forms a volcano with gentle slopes: a shield volcano. Most shield volcanoes are formed from fluid, basaltic lava flows. Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa are shield volcanoes. They are the world’s largest active volcanoes, rising over 9 km above the sea floor around the island of Hawai’i.

Explanation:

Hope it's helpful for you

Similar questions