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  2. Lava - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lava

    A lava flow is an outpouring of lava during an effusive eruption. (An explosive eruption, by contrast, produces a mixture of volcanic ash and other fragments called tephra, not lava flows.) The viscosity of most lava is about that of ketchup, roughly 10,000 to 100,000 times that of water. Even so, lava can flow great distances before cooling ...

  3. Magma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magma

    The tendency of felsic lava to be cooler than mafic lava increases the viscosity difference. The silicon ion is small and highly charged, and so it has a strong tendency to coordinate with four oxygen ions, which form a tetrahedral arrangement around the much smaller silicon ion.

  4. La Garita Caldera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Garita_Caldera

    These rocks were identified as lava because the unit has a highly elongated shape (1:50) and very high viscosity of the crystal-rich magma similar to those of flow-layered silicic lava. The Pagosa Peak Dacite formed by low-column pyroclastic fountaining and lateral transport as dense, poorly-inflated pyroclastic flows. [10]

  5. Stratovolcano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratovolcano

    The lava flowing from stratovolcanoes typically cools and solidifies before spreading far, due to high viscosity. The magma forming this lava is often felsic, having high to intermediate levels of silica (as in rhyolite, dacite, or andesite), with lesser amounts of less viscous mafic magma. [4] Extensive felsic lava flows are uncommon, but can ...

  6. Obsidian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsidian

    It is an igneous rock. [6] Produced from felsic lava, obsidian is rich in the lighter elements such as silicon, oxygen, aluminium, sodium, and potassium. It is commonly found within the margins of rhyolitic lava flows known as obsidian flows. These flows have a high content of silica, giving them a high viscosity.

  7. Andesite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andesite

    Andesite lava typically has a viscosity of 3.5 × 10 6 cP (3.5 × 10 3 Pa⋅s) at 1,200 °C (2,190 °F). This is slightly greater than the viscosity of smooth peanut butter . [ 13 ] As a result, andesitic volcanism is often explosive, forming tuffs and agglomerates .

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