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3 Types Of Volcanoes

The 3 types of volcanoes are stratovolcano (also known as a composite volcano), cinder cone volcano, and shield volcano. Each one is different in its own right and provides unique clues to the geologic history of the region and information about how the volcano formed and what we can expect in the future.

Volcanoes have been around since the beginning of Earth, some 4.54 billion years ago. Through that time volcanoes were constantly being born, dying, and eroding down into low-lying lakes and oceans. Geologists study the life cycle of volcanoes in the past to get a sense of how volcanoes today will behave and hopefully predict better the onset of a volcanic eruption. To do this, however, we must know the three types of volcanoes and what makes them tick.

All civilization has from time to time become a thin crust over a volcano of revolution. – Havelock Ellis

What Is A Volcano?

A volcano is a surface expression of the Earth transferring molten rock or magma from beneath the rust to above the Earth’s crust (lithosphere). Unlike mountains, volcanoes contain conduits through vents, chimneys, and magma chambers, that move magma upward.

A volcano can exist from a number of different situations from hot spots such as the Hawaiian islands to subduction zones that formed Mount St Helens. These are surface expressions of interactions between Earth’s plates and the below lying upper mantle. Convection in the upper mantle and movement of lithospheric and oceanic plates can produce situations in which the molten rock in the upper mantle is able to breach the surface of the Earth and be released as lava.

Characteristics Of A Volcano

You will notice that some volcanoes are constantly erupting lava such as the main island of Hawaii and others build up over decades, centuries, or millennia until erupting. This is largely due to the confining stress and rate of magma chamber filling.

You can imagine that if there is a “leaky” system and you’re constantly filling that system with magma you will see continuous outflow. This is the case in Hawaii where the magma chamber has reached near the surface and there is little confining pressure to limit an eruption or prolong one.

On the other hand, you can have situations such as Mount St. Helens where the magma chamber is overlain with thousands of feet of rock. This will require the magma chamber to build up sufficient pressure to equal and then surpass the overburden pressure. At that point the volcano will erupt in a spectacular fashion, sending the overburden rock, ash, and lava high into the air.

“A volcano is an independent machine… being engaged in its own peculiar business, cooking as it were its special dish, which in due time is to be separately served … pouring out totally different kinds of lava.” — Clarence Dutton

But wait, we’re missing one key component. That is a gas composition within the magma itself.

You will notice that some volcanoes produce liquid like lava that pours down the side of the volcano whereas others explosively erupt sending rock, ash, and lava high into the air. As mentioned before, this is partially due to the overburden pressure required to erupt but also partially due to the presence of gas within the magma.

Imagine if you have a significant amount of gas such as CO2 within the magma. When confined in the magma chamber that gas is in solution and significantly compressed compared to the volume at the surface. As the volcano erupts, the pressure on those gases dramatically decreases which means the volume rapidly increases. This chain reaction acts to explosively expand the gas and causes overlying rock and magma to be ejected high into the atmosphere.

On the other hand, lava such as that at Arenal volcano or Hawaii erupts with little gas, meaning the magma simply runs down the slope of the volcano.

Where Do Volcanoes Form?

Volcanoes form often times at boundaries of plates (convergent or divergent) or hot spots.

In the case of hot spots, they can occur anywhere in the world regardless of being nearby a plate boundary. Hot spots are not well understood but the basic premise is that you have upwelling magma in a stationary location, which acts to eventually melt through Earth’s crust and form a volcano. Imagine a blow torch over a piece of bread and, eventually, the blow torch burns through the bread and “erupts” onto the surface.

Divergent Plate Boundary

Divergent plate boundaries are responsible for the opening up of the Atlantic ocean and are associated with plates being pulled or pushed apart. This thins the crust and allows for magma to erupt in the center of the diverging plates. It’s still unclear whether the plates are pulled or pushed apart, but in either situation, this creates a localized ridge of thinner crust and less overburden for the magma to come to the surface.

Convergent plate boundary

The last place volcanoes typically form are convergent plate boundaries. This is similar to what we see on the northwest coast of the United States, the Andes Mountains, and Japan. In fact, the ring of fire along the Pacific Ocean is due to the subduction of the oceanic crust underneath the continental crust through converging plates.

Volcanoes situated along the Ring of Fire

As one plate subducts underneath the other it gets heated and begins to melt, along with rock that holds water within its structure. This water turns to steam, further reduces the melting temperature of the rock and the now buoyant molten rock migrates upward to the surface creating a volcano.

3 Types Of Volcanoes

Now that we have a good fundamental background on what volcanoes are, let’s dive into the three major types of volcanoes. We will discuss the key differences in the volcanoes and examples that you have likely heard of.

Volcano Type Volcano Shape Size Volcanic Material Eruption Style Example Volcano

Cinder Cone

Steep conical hill with 30- to 40-degree slopes

Small, less than 300m tall

cinders

Explosive

Paricutin

Shield Volcano

Very gentle slopes with a broad base

Large, many 10’s of kilometers across

fluid lava flows, typically mafic (basalt)

Quiet

Mauna Loa

Stratovolcano

Goes from gentle to steep slopes from base to peak

Large, up to 10 km across

many layers of lava and pyroclastics

Explosive

Mount St. Helens

Stratovolcano (Composite Volcano)

A stratovolcano, sometimes referred to as a composite volcano, is an explosive volcano that has built up several layers through continuous eruptions. The volcano is typically conical and large in scale compared to cinder cone volcanoes.

Image by Pxhere is licensed under CC0

The layers are made up of lithified lava, pumice and volcanic ash that have fallen on the volcano during an eruption. Typically, eruptions are explosive with high gas concentrations and significant overburden. Stratovolcanoes are also characterized by steep sides, especially compared to a shield volcano.

Most of the time the magma in stratovolcanoes are felsic and have high concentrations of silica. We see stratovolcanoes all around the world and on other planets such as Mars. These volcanoes are typically thought of when we picture devastating eruptions since they often contain significant gas and erupt spectacularly.

A famous stratovolcano, Mount St. Helens, erupted in 1980 with a plume that extended 3,000 feet above the volcano. These volcanoes are associated with subduction zones typically, as seen along the Pacific Ring of Fire. Other well known stratovolcanoes are Krakatoa, Vesuvius, and Mount Tambora; all of which had major eruptions that killed thousands of people and altered climate on a continental scale. Mount Tambora is responsible for the most powerful volcanic eruption on record, which sent ash plumes around the world dimming the sun and reducing global temperatures by 3.5°C.

Stratovolcanoes Around The World
List of Stratovolcanoes
Alban Hills
Alid Volcano
Anak Krakatoa
Anatahan
Antisana
Aragats
Arenal
Askja
August
Avach
Back River volcanic complex
Baekdu Mounta
Banks Pen
Bárðarbunga
Barren Island (Andaman Islands)
Bazman
Beerenberg
Bombalai Hill
Borawli
Brown Peak
Calbuco
Callaqui
Carihuairazo
Cayambe
Cerro Arenales
Chaitén
Chato
Chich
Chimborazo
Cleveland volcano
Colima
Copahue
Coquihalla Mounta
Corazón
Cotopaxi
Cumbre Vieja
El Altar
El Misti
Eldfell and Helgafell
Eyjafjallajökull
Galeras
Galunggung
Glacier Peak
Green Mounta
Guazapa
Guishan Island
Hekla
Hoodoo Mounta
Irazu
Irruputuncu
Izalco
Jabal al-Tair island off the coast of Yemen
Karymsky
Klyuchevskaya Sopka or Kliuchevskoi
Kollóttadyngja
Korov
Koryaksky
Krakatoa
Kverkfjöll
La Grande Soufrière
Lanín
Lanín
Lascar Volcano
Lassen Peak
Licancabur
Llaima
Mammoth Mounta
May
Mount Adams
Mount Adams
Mount Adatara
Mount Agung and Mount Batur
Mount Akutan
Mount Apo
Mount Ararat and Little Ararat
Mount Arayat
Mount B
Mount Baker
Mount Banahaw
Mount Bird
Mount Boucherie
Mount Bulusan
Mount Camero
Mount Cayley
Mount Churchill
Mount Damavand
Mount Discovery
Mount Edziza
Mount Elbrus
Mount Erciyes
Mount Erebus
Mount Etna
Mount Fogo
Mount Fuji
Mount Garibaldi
Mount Harcourt
Mount Haruna
Mount Hasan
Mount Hood
Mount Huds
Mount Iriga and Mount Isarog
Mount Jeffers
Mount Kanla
Mount Katmai
Mount Kazbek
Mount Kelud
Mount Kenya
Mount Ker
Mount Kilimanjaro
Mount Makil
Mount Mal
Mount Mariveles and Mount Natib
Mount Meager
Mount Melbourne
Mount Merapi
Mount Meru
Mount Mihara
Mount Morn
Mount Ngauruhoe
Mount Nyirag
Mount Overlord
Mount P
Mount Pavlof
Mount Pelée
Mount Pico
Mount Price
Mount R
Mount Ra
Mount Redoubt
Mount Ruapehu
Mount Scenery
Mount Semeru and Mount Bromo
Mount Shasta
Mount Shishald
Mount St
Mount Tambora
Mount Taranaki/Egm
Mount Taylor
Mount Unzen
Mount Vesuvius
Mount Vsevidof
Mount Yufu
Mounts of Cantal
Nevado de Toluca
Nevado del Ruiz
Nevados de Chillán
Northwest side of Mount Ra
Ojos del Salado
Ol Do
Öræfajökull
Pacaya
Par
Peak of Mt
Pengu
Pich
Pico de Orizaba
Poás
Popocatépetl
Puy de Sancy
Reventador
Sabalan
Sahand
Sakurajima
San Francisco Mounta
San Miguel and Ch
San Vicente
Sangay
Santa Ana
Satellite picture of Mount Ararat
Shiveluch
Sierra Nevada
Snæfellsjökull
Soufrière (volcano)
Suchitán
Taburete
Taftan Volcano
Tahual
Tavurvur
Tecuamburro
Teide
The Black Tusk
The Mount Cayley volcanic complex
The Soufriere Hills
The summit of Snæfellsjökull
The Three Sisters
Tungurahua
Turrialba
Ub
Ulawun
Villarrica
Volcán Acatenango
Volcán Atitlán
Volcán Barú
Volcán Cerro Quemado (Almol
Volcán Ch
Volcán de Agua
Volcán de Fuego
Volcán Ipala
Volcán Jumay
Volcán Moyuta
Volcán San Pedro
Volcán Santa María
Volcán Siete Orejas
Volcán Tacaná
Volcán Tajumulco Highest po
Volcán Tolimán
Volcanic activity at Anak Krakatau
Vulcano
White Island/Whakaari

Cinder Cone Volcano

A cinder cone volcano, sometimes referred to as a scoria cone, is a small steep sided conical volcano. It is often fairly small with loose volcanic fragments such as ash, scoria, or cinder that has fallen down the sides of the volcano.

“Mauna Kea cinder cone” by the USGS, linked from NASA web page and Wikimedia Commons, is licensed under CC0

They are associated with volcanic vents that erupt and send small fragments of solidified magma into the air that rain down the slopes of the volcano. This produces a very steep-sided mountain between 30 and 40 degrees and almost perfectly canonical with a circular base. You can often find cinder cone volcanoes associated with the other two types of volcanoes, shield and stratovolcano. Typically eruptions are not significant and happen much more frequently.

“A volcano may be considered as a cannon of immense size.” — Oliver Goldsmith

Cinder Cone Volcanoes Around The World
List of Cinder Cone Volcanoes
Albuquerque volcanic field
Alligator Lake volcanic complex
Amboy Crater
Andagua volcanic field
Anticura Group
Atlin Volcanic Field
Austral Volcanic Zone
Big Timothy Mountain
Buck Hill
Caburgua-Huelemolle
Cache Hill
Camp Hill
Capulin Volcano National Monument
Carrán-Los Venados
Central Volcanic Zone
Cinder Mountain
Cinnamon Butte
Cocoa Crater
Coffee Crater
Cracker Creek Cone
Davis Lake volcanic field
Dragon Cone
Easter Island
El Jorullo
El Rojo Norte
El Rojo Sur
Europe
Flourmill Cone
France
Fui Group
Gabrielse Cone
Grand Sarcoui
Hoodoo Butte
Hverfjall
Ibex Mountain
Indian Heaven
Ingakslugwat Hills
Iskut-Unuk River Cones
Itcha Range
Ivao Group
Kana Cone
Karapınar
Kitasu Hill
Koko Crater
Kostakan
Kostal Cone
Kula
Lava Butte
Lomonosov Group
Los Venados Group
Machmel River Cone
Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill
Maungarei / Mount Wellington
Maungawhau / Mount Eden
Mirador
Mono-Inyo Craters
Monte Nuovo
Moraine Cone
Morean Volcano
Mount Elephant
Mount Fox
Mount Fox crater
Mount Gordon
Mount Komezuka
Mount Leura
Mount Omuro
Mount Suribachi
Mount Tabor
Mount Talbert
Mount Tongariro
Nahta Cone
Nazko Cone
Ne Ch’e Ddhawa
Newberry Volcano
Opal Cone
Pali-Aike Volcanic Field
Parícutin
Philippines
Pichi-Golgol Group
Pilot Butte
Pinacate Peaks
Pisgah Crater
Pointed Stick Cone
Powell Butte
Prindle Volcano
Puʻu ʻŌʻō
Puʻu Waʻawaʻa Ahupuaʻa
Puna Pau
Puy de Côme
Puy de la Vache
Puy de Lassolas
Puy de Pariou
Puy des Goules
Puys Chopine et des Gouttes
Puyuhuapi
Ridge Cone
Rocky Butte
Roden Crater
S P Crater
Satah Mountain
Schonchin Butte
Sidas Cone
Sleet Cone
Smith Volcano
South side of Cocoa Crater
Storm Cone
Sunset Crater
Tantalus
The Saucer
Tolmachev Dol
Triplex Cone
Tseax Cone
Tseax Cone lava bed covered with moss and lichen
Twin Buttes
Twin Cone
Vernadskii Ridge
Veyo Volcano
Volcan Rumoka
Volcanic Creek Cone
Vulcan’s Throne
Williams Cone
Wizard Island
Zuni-Bandera volcanic field

Shield Volcano

Shield volcanoes are typically large mafic volcanoes that have wide broad and low relief slopes. The lava erupted from a shield volcano is typically runny and low in gas so the lava simply flows down the side of the volcano during an eruption. Think of lava you’ve seen flowing off the edge of the big island of Hawaii and into the ocean.

This almost constant low viscosity lava over time builds up broad sheets of lithified lava to create a shield-shaped volcano. The low viscosity is due to the mineralogy of the lava and is typically mafic in nature. You won’t see large eruptions where lava is ejected high into the air, but the lava can be fast flowing down the slopes, enveloping houses and cars on its way down. Since the lava is runny it can flow for miles from the original source and someone who may think they are safe due to distance from the volcano could see lava at their doorstep.

Shield volcanoes are typical of hot spots, such as the Hawaiian island chain. In fact, if you take the base of Mauna Loa, which is the shield volcano that makes up the big island of Hawaii, it is the tallest mountain in the world from base to peak. However, much of the volcano is under tens of thousands of feet of water. These volcanoes can also be hundreds of miles wide at the base.

Shield Volcanoes Around The World
List of Shield Volcanoes
Alba Mons
Alcedo Volcano
Ambrym
Apoyeque
Arsia Mons
Ascraeus Mons
Ball’s Pyramid
Banks Peninsula
Bermuda Pedestal
Billy Mitchell
Bottom half of Mount Erebus
Bottom half of Mount Etna
Cerro Azul
Dunedin Volcano
Emi Koussi
Erta Ale
Fernandina Island
Haleakalā
Heart Peaks
House Mountain Volcano
Hualālai
Indian Heaven
Io
Itcha Range
Karaca Dağ
Kīlauea
Kohala
Kookooligit Mountains
La Cumbre
La Grille
Loloru
Lord Howe Island
Maat Mons
Masaya
Masaya Volcano
Mauna Kea
Mauna Loa
Mauna Loa
Medicine Lake Volcano
Menengai
Mount Andrus
Mount Berlin
Mount Karthala
Mount Marsabit
Mount Moulton
Mount Nyamuragira
Mount Sidley
Mount Takahe
Mount Terror
Mount Wrangell
Namarunu
Newberry Volcano
Niuafo’ou
Olympus Mons
Pavonis Mons
Piton de la Fournaise
Piton des Neiges
Poike
Purico Complex
Queen Mary’s Peak
Rabaul
Rangitoto Island
Rano Kau
Sacabaya
Santorini
São Tomé
Sierra Negra
Skjaldbreiður
Syrtis Major Planum
Tamu Massif
Tata Sabaya
Taveuni
Terevaka
The Three Sisters in Oregon
Theia Mons
Tweed Volcano
Verkhovoy

That wraps up the 3 major types of volcanoes and gives you a good basis for understanding more about the background of volcanoes. Volcanic eruptions are something humans need to manage globally, albeit, we are learning to become more predictive and better at managing the risk of an eventual eruption.

“Volcanoes are one way earth gives birth to itself.” — Robert Gross

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