Volcano

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    The Volcano that Changed the World Grant Fink The weather can change on the drop of a hat, or rather the eruption of a volcano. Mount Tambora erupted two hundred years ago in modern day Indonesia, but despite quickly becoming one of the most violent volcanic eruptions, it went unnoticed because of mysterious weather patterns. Could the reason behind this puzzling weather be linked with the eruption? Today, scientists have learned off of other volcanic eruptions that these two events are linked.…

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    A volcano is a surface landform resulting from the extrusion of magma from underground as lava, ash, rocks, and gasses are erupted in various proportions. Each year, around 60 major volcanoes erupt globally. How hazardous each one is dependent on a variety of human and physical factors that determine the level of impact on human activity that each event exerts. I will be looking at how the physical properties of a volcano, interact with human variables to make certain volcanoes more hazardous…

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    Essay On Mount St. Helens

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    in slow motion, creating a long process that eventually resulting in the formation of volcanoes. The Cascade Range of the Pacific Northwest is known for its deep evergreen forests and numerous tall jagged cones and this area is home to the Strato-Volcano Peak known today as Mount St. Helens. Originally named “Louwala-Clough,” or “Smoking Mountain,” by the Native American Indians in the region. Many legends were handed down explaining accounts about eruptions the Indians witnessed about Mount St.…

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    Specific purpose: To inform the audience on what happened to Pompeii. Central Idea: Mount Vesuvius is a dangerous active volcano that has the potential to cause the equivalent damage or worse even today. Introduction I. “I looked round: a dense black cloud was coming up behind us, spreading over the earth like a flood. Many besought the aid of the goods, but still more imagined there were no gods left, and that the universe was plunged into eternal darkness for evermore.” A. These were the words…

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    Pompeii Research Paper

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    was located in the shadow of Mt. Vesuvius. Rich landowners built elegant houses there. Vesuvius had been asleep for 800 years so nobody thought it would erupt. Vesuvius had solid lava on the top of it so all the lava inside built up and made the volcano erupt. The fumes and ashes suffocated many people. People were burned and died and the town was devastated. A vivid description of the eruption was given by Pliny the Younger who was 18 at the time. He watched this disaster from 20 miles away.…

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    the first national park that is home to a super volcano. There is lots of wildlife like grizzly bears, wolves, elk, and herds of bison. These make Yellowstone a popular tourist attraction. If this supervolcano erupts it could destroy the wildlife and have a giant impact on the united states. Scientist more recently discovered a second magma chamber under the already huge volcano. This holds enough magma to fill the grand canyon 11 times! If the volcano erupted it would make over half of…

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    “CRASH!”, “BANG!” went Pompeii and everyone living in it. August 24th, 79 C.E. Pompeiiś volcano erupted and sent million lives, to death. Pompeii was a Roman city were tons of people lived and called home, But then, a volcano near the Bay of Naples in Italy erupted, leaving the beautiful city buried under a thick blanket of volcanic ash. In the story “the dog of Pompeii” by Louis Untermeyer, it tells you about a blind boy, bimbo, and his dog, tito, and how it explains that tito was bimbo's…

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    Volcanic Eruptions

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    When a volcano erupts it is hard to comprehend the destruction and devastation that may occur with the event. In ancient times when there was no science to explain why a mountain would spew fire, rocks, and ash cultures look for an alternative justification. Many cultures came to the conclusion that the best way to explain such an event was through legends, myths, and stories. The gods and goddesses described in these tales would do things that would create an eruption, such as Pele the Hawaiian…

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    On August 26, 1883, a catastrophic natural disaster happened that affected the lives of people near and far. The volcano, Krakatoa, erupted leaving a great deal of devastation in its wake. Krakatoa is a volcanic island located in the Sunda Strait along the Indonesian Island Arc. The island along with two others were remains of an earlier eruption from two hundred years before. Krakatoa Island had three large hill-like or mountain shaped volcanic cones named Rakata, Danan, and Perboewatan. Before…

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    Mount Tambora

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    Good morning/afternoon, Mr Beier and 9B, today I will be comparing and contrasting two major volcanoes, Mount Tambora, and Mount Santa Maria. Before I go into detail about the similarities and differences of the volcanoes, I will provide some background information on how volcanoes are formed and how they work. According to Anderson, 2012, Volcanoes are defined as a vent, or opening, in the Earth’s surface through which molten rock, gases, and ash erupt. The word also refers to the form or…

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