Volcanic Eruption

Home Natural Hazards Volcanic Eruption
Volcanic eruptions occur when molten rock (magma), volcanic gases and fragmented material are forcefully expelled onto or near the Earth’s surface, creating dramatic, often destructive displays of nature’s power. These events range from gentle lava flows to explosive ash-cloud eruptions, and each one carries clues about what’s happening deep beneath the ground: the type of magma, the amount of gas it contains, the path it takes to the surface and how it interacts with the surrounding rocks and environment. In this category you’ll discover how eruptions originate, what kinds of hazards they generate (such as pyroclastic flows, ash fall, lava streams, lahars and volcanic gases), how they alter landscapes and climate, and why engineers, geologists and emergency-response teams must understand them to assess risk, plan for safety and design infrastructure in volcanic regions. From the scale of the smallest vent to the most massive super-eruption, volcanic activity tells a story of Earth’s interior, tectonic processes and the delicate balance between destruction and creation.

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