A volcano
is a rupture or opening on the surface of the earth where magma breaks through
releasing gas, ash, lava and molten rock.
Magma mostly comes from the asthenosphere below the lithosphere. The asthenosphere is weaker than the
lithosphere and close to its melting point. The depth and pressure from above
keeps the rocks in the asthenosphere from melting. When two plates spread, the lithosphere
becomes weaker and does not exert as much pressure on the asthenosphere below,
resulting in decompression melting and the forming of magma which rises to the
surface. Most volcanoes are located in
divergent or convergent plate boundaries.
In subduction zones, volatiles are released as one plate moves under the
other. Volatiles are chemical compounds
like water, carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide that when released can lower the
melting temperature of rocks in the asthenosphere causing the magma to rise.
Madagascar has five volcanoes. They are Ambre-Bobaomby, Ankaizina, Ankaratra
Field, Itasy Volcanic field and Nosy-Be.
All of these volcanoes are dormant.
The last eruption occurred in 6050 BC in the Itasy Volcanic Field. Since there is no active volcanic activity
now or in the recent pass, Madagascar does not have any real preparedness plans
in case of an erupting volcano.
Madagascar does have two active volcanoes off its coast. Both of them are shield volcanoes. Shield volcanoes are wider than they are
taller and produce the most lava flow due to low viscosity. The eruptions are
usually not that explosive and are most common in hot spots. The Volcano Piton
De La Fournaise on Reunion Island is 300 miles east of Madagascar and is one of
the most active volcanoes in the world.
There have been more than 150 recorded eruptions since the 17th century
with the most recent eruption on August 1st of this year. The
volcano Karthala on The Comoros islands is around 200 miles northwest of
Madagascar and has erupted more than 20 times since the 19th century
with the last eruption on May 29, 2006. Most of the eruptions have been mild
but phreatic explosions have occurred in 1918, 1948, 1991 and 2005. Phreatic explosions occur when magma heats
surface water so quickly that it turns to steam causing an explosion of steam,
rock, water and Ash. In 2005, 30,000
residents were evacuated after an eruption because there was a risk of lava
flow and deadly volcanic gas. They
returned to their homes and found ash tainted water. These volcanoes don’t appear to pose much of
a threat to Madagascar. If one of them
had a huge eruption causing part of it to fall into the ocean, it could potentially
cause a tsunami. If Karthala had a huge
phreatic explosion, ash could potentially reach Madagascar which might pollute
the water, damage crops, and cause respiratory problems for animals and
humans.
REFERENCES
Kellor, Edward A., Devecchio, Duane
E., (2015) Natural Hazards, Earth's processes as Hazards,
Disasters, and Catastrophes (4TH ED).
Piton De La Fournaise, www.Wikipedia.org
Mount Karthala, www.Wikpedia.org
Karthola Volcano, Comoros – John Seach, www.volcanolive.com/Karthola.html
Phreatic eruption, www.Wikpedia .org
And like other countries last week, it might be worth exploring tapping into their natural resource (geothermal)...it seems they are thinking about it:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/266170522_Geothermal_Development_in_Madagascar_An_Alternative_to_the_Energy_Crisis
And like other countries last week, it might be worth exploring tapping into their natural resource (geothermal)...it seems they are thinking about it:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/266170522_Geothermal_Development_in_Madagascar_An_Alternative_to_the_Energy_Crisis