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Rhyolite (/ ˈraɪ.əlaɪt / RY-ə-lyte) [1][2][3][4] is the most silica -rich of volcanic rocks. It is generally glassy or fine-grained (aphanitic) in texture, but may be porphyritic, containing larger mineral crystals (phenocrysts) in an otherwise fine-grained groundmass. The mineral assemblage is predominantly quartz, sanidine, and plagioclase.
Mount Tarawera is a volcano on the North Island of New Zealand within the older but volcanically productive Ōkataina Caldera. Located 24 kilometres southeast of Rotorua, it consists of a series of rhyolitic lava domes that were fissured down the middle by an explosive basaltic eruption in 1886. While the 1886 eruption was basaltic, study has ...
The Taupō Volcano erupts rhyolite, a viscous magma, with a high silica content, a feature associated with the middle portion of the Taupō Volcanic Zone within the Taupō Rift. This is an intra-arc rift in the eastern part of the continental Australian Plate , resulting from an oblique convergence with the Pacific Plate in the Hikurangi ...
Highest elevation. 2,797 m (9,177 ft) (Mount Ruapehu) The Taupō Volcanic Zone (TVZ) is a volcanic area in the North Island of New Zealand. It has been active for at least the past two million years and is still highly active. Mount Ruapehu marks its south-western end and the zone runs north-eastward through the Taupō and Rotorua areas and ...
About 0.5% of the eruptives was low-SiO 2 rhyolite believed to have been tapped from isolated pockets in the underlying crystal mush. [1]: 8 Two distinct mafic magmas were involved in the eruption, and a total volume of 3–5 km 3 (0.72–1.20 cu mi) of mafic magma is atypically high compared to other nearby rhyolitic eruptions. [11]
They include rhyolite and dacite magmas. With such a high silica content, these magmas are extremely viscous, ranging from 10 8 cP (10 5 Pa⋅s) for hot rhyolite magma at 1,200 °C (2,190 °F) to 10 11 cP (10 8 Pa⋅s) for cool rhyolite magma at 800 °C (1,470 °F). [21] For comparison, water has a viscosity of about 1 cP (0.001 Pa⋅s).
The most common magma type at Ōkataina is rhyolite. [7] The warning time before eruptions is currently suspected to be potentially hours as volcanic unrest signals are very non specific, historic composition analysis is consistent with this speed from magma reservoir to surface and this was all the warning given by the only rhyolitic eruption ...
Rhyolitic lava dome of Chaitén Volcano during its 2008–2010 eruption One of the Inyo Craters, an example of a rhyolite dome Nea Kameni seen from Thera, Santorini. In volcanology, a lava dome is a circular, mound-shaped protrusion resulting from the slow extrusion of viscous lava from a volcano.