Pyroclastic flow(also known as a pyroclastic density current)
Pyroclastic flows and surges form in several ways:
Ø gravitational collapse of a vertical eruption column (Sparks et al., 1978),
Ø the "boiling-over" of a highly gas-charged magma from a crater (
Ø inclined blasts from the base of an emerging spine or dome (Lacroix, 1904),
Ø lateral blasts following release of pressure caused by collapse of part of a volcano edifice (Bogoyavlenskaya et al., 1985; Siebert et al., 1987)
Ø collapse of a growing dome (Mellors et al., 1988),
Ø ash fountaining (Hoblitt, 1986), and
Ø collapse from the front of a lava flow (Rose et al., 1977).
The term "pyroclastic" - derived from the Greek words pyro (fire) and klastos (broken) - describes materials formed by the fragmentation of magma and rock by explosive volcanic activity. Most volcanic ash is basically fine-grained pyroclastic material composed of tiny particles of explosively disintegrated old volcanic rock or new magma. Larger sized pyroclastic fragments are called lapilli, blocks, or bombs
Volcanic Ash -- Aggluntinate ... Airfall ... Ash ... Ashfall ... Blocks ... Bombs ... Bread-crust bombs ... Cinder ... Cow-dung bombs ... Fusiform bombs ... Glass ... Lapilli ... Pele's hair ... Pele's tears ... Pumice ... Pyroclastic-fallout ... Reticulite ... Ribbon bombs ... Scoria ... Spatter ... Spindle bombs ... Tephra ... Tephra clasts ... Tephra deposits ... Tephra fall ... Thread-lace scoria ... Volcanic ash ... Volcanic bombs ... Welded spatter ...
A pyroclastic flow is a fluidized mixture of solid to semi-solid fragments and hot, expanding gases that flows down the flank of a volcanic edifice. These awesome features are heavier-than-air emulsions that move much like a snow avalanche, except that they are fiercely hot, contain toxic gases, and move at phenomenal, hurricane-force speeds, often over 100 km/hour. They are the most deadly of all volcanic phenomena.
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