Dictionary Definition
vulcanology n : the branch of geology that
studies volcanoes [syn: volcanology]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Vul*ca-no*lo-gy VOHL-kahn-OH-loh-jeeEtymology
Vulcan: The God of fire.Noun
- The study of volcanoes.
Translations
- Dutch: vulkanologie
- Finnish: vulkanologia, tulivuoritiede
- French: volcanologie
- German: Vulkanologie
- Greek: hephaistologia
- Italian: vulcanologia
- Latin: vulcanologia
See also
Extensive Definition
Volcanology (also spelled vulcanology) is the
study of volcanoes,
lava, magma, and related geological and geophysical phenomena. The
term volcanology is derived from the Latin word
vulcan, the
Roman
god of fire.
A volcanologist is a person who studies the
formation of volcanoes, and their current and historic eruptions.
Volcanologists frequently visit volcanoes, especially active ones,
to observe volcanic
eruptions, collect eruptive products including tephra (such as ash or
pumice), rock and
lava samples. One major
focus of enquiry is the prediction of eruptions; there is currently
no accurate way to do this, but predicting eruptions, like
predicting earthquakes, could save many lives.
History of volcanology
Volcanology has a very extensive history. The earliest known recording of a volcanic eruption is recorded by a c.6000 BC wall painting of a volcanic eruption. The painting, from the Neolithic site at Çatal Höyük (also known as Çatalhöyük Çatal Hüyük) in Anatolia, Turkey, shows a twin peaked volcano in eruption, with a town at its base. The volcano is probably Hasan Dag, which has two peaks.Mythical explanations
The classical world of Greece and the early Roman Empire explained volcanoes as the work of the gods as science and alchemy had no explanation for their existence. Grecian myths and tales tell of Atlantis, a fabled island which sank into the sea. Plato (428-348 B.C.) told of the disappearance of a vast island and its powerful civilization, the Atlanteans, in two of his dialogues, Critias and Timaeus. It is now considered that the island of Thera, now Santorini, in the Aegean Sea, was destroyed by a tremendous series of volcanic explosions around 1620 B.C., with ash falls of up to a foot deep recorded in Turkey. The explosion of Thera sent colossal tidal waves, estimated at 100 feet height, racing across the Aegean, and the southern coast of Crete. Other recordings of the Thera eruption spawned Greek myths, namely the Deucalion, in which Poseidon, god of the sea, took revenge upon Zeus by inundating Attica, Argolis, Salonika, Rhodes and the coast of Lycia (Turkey) to Sicily.Greeks also considered that Hephaestus, the
god of fire, sat below the volcano Etna, forging the
weapons of Zeus. His minions, the cyclops with their single
staring eye, may be an allegory to the round craters and cones of a
volcano. Indeed, the Greek word used to describe volcanoes was
etna, or hiera, after Heracles, the son
of Zeus. The Roman poet Virgil, in
interpreting the Greek mythos, held that the hero Enceladus
was buried beneath Etna by the goddess Athena as punishment for
disobeying the gods; the mountain's rumblings were his tormented
cries, the flames his breath and the tremors his railing against
the bars of his prison. Enceladus' brother Mimas was buried
beneath Vesuvius by
Hephaestus, and the blood of other defeated giants welled up in the
Phlegrean Fields surrounding Vesuvius.
Tribal legends of volcanoes abound from the
Pacific
Ring of Fire and the Americas, usually invoking the forces of
the supernatural or the divine to explain the violent outbursts of
volcanoes. Taranaki and
Tongariro,
according to Māori mythology, were lovers who fell in love with
Pihanga,
and a spiteful jealous fight ensued. Māori will not to this day
live between Tongariro and Taranaki for fear of the dispute flaring
up again.
Greco-Roman science
The first attempt at a scientific explanation of volcanoes was undertaken by the Greek philosopher Empedocles (c. 490-430 B.C.), who saw the world divided into four elemental forces, of Earth, Air, Fire and Water. Volcanoes, Empedocles maintained, were the manifestation of Elemental Fire. Plato contended that channels of hot and cold waters flow in inexhaustible quantities through subterranean rivers. In the depths of the earth snakes a vast river of fire, the Pyriphlegethon, which feeds all the world's volcanoes. Aristotle considered underground fire as the result of "the...friction of the wind when it plunges into narrow passages."Wind would play a key role in explanations of
volcanoes until the 16th century. Lucretius, a
Roman philosopher, claimed Etna was completely hollow and the fires
of the underground driven by a fierce wind circulating near sea
level. Ovid believed that the flame was fed from "fatty foods" and
eruptions stopped when the food ran out. Vitruvius
contended that sulfur, alum and bitumen fed the deep fires.
Observations by Pliny the
Elder noted the presence of earthquakes preceded an eruption;
he died in the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD
while investigating it at Stabiae. His
nephew, Pliny the
Younger gave detailed descriptions of the eruption in which his
uncle died, attributing his death to the effects of toxic gases.
Such eruptions have been named Plinian in honour
of the two authors.
Christian mythology
The study of volcanology was not advanced much between the days of Plato and Hutton. The Christian world explained volcanoes by a multitude of prescientific notions, but it was also thought they were the work of Satan or the wrath of God, and only saintly miracles could avert their wrath. For this reason the relics of Saint Agatha were paraded in front of lava advancing on Catania in 253 A.D., and miraculously the lava clove in two (down two valleys) and spared the town. Unfortunately the relics of St. Agatha proved ineffective in 1669, with the loss of much of Catania to Etna's lava.In 1660 the eruption of Vesuvius rained twinned
pyroxene crystals and
ash upon the nearby villages. The twinned pyroxene crystals
resembled the crucifix and this was interpreted as the work of
Saint
Januarius. In Naples, the relics
of St Januarius are paraded through town at every major eructation
of Vesuvius. The register of these processions allowed British
diplomat and amateur naturalist
Sir William Hamilton to document Vesuvius' eruptions, one of
the first few 'scientific' studies of the eruptive history of a
volcano.
Renaissance observations
Renaissance descriptions of volcanoes vastly improved the state of knowledge, despite the resistance of the Church to scientific explorations of the natural world, especially those which were at odds with Biblical teachings. Nevertheless, nuees ardentes were described from the Azores in 1580. Georgius Agricola argued the rays of the sun, as later proposed by Descartes had nothing to do with volcanoes. Agricola believed vapor under pressure caused eruptions of 'mointain oil' and basalt.Jesuit Athanasius
Kircher (1602–1680) witnessed eruptions of Mount Etna and
Stromboli, then visited the crater of Vesuvius and published his
view of an Earth with a central fire connected to numerous others
caused by the burning of sulfur, bitumen and coal.
Johannes
Kepler considered volcanoes as conduits for the tears and
excrement of the Earth, voiding bitumen, tar and sulfur. Descartes,
pronouncing that God had created the Earth in an instant, declared
he had done so in three layers; the fiery depths, a layer of water,
and the air. Volcanoes, he said, were formed where the rays of the
sun pierced the earth.
Science wrestled with the ideas of the combustion
of pyrite with water,
that rock was solidified bitumen, and with notions of rock being
formed from water (Neptunism). Of
the volcanoes then known, all were near the water, hence the action
of the sea upon the land was used to explain volcanism.
Modern volcanology
Seismic observations using seismographs deployed near
volcanic areas, watching out for increased seismicity during
volcanic events, in particular looking for long period harmonic
tremors which signal magma
movement through volcanic conduits.
Surface deformation
monitoring includes the use of geodetic techniques such as
leveling, tilt, strain, angle and distance measurements through
tiltmeters, total stations and EDMs. This also includes GNSS observations and
InSAR. Surface deformation indicates magma upwelling: increased
magma supply produces bulges in the volcanic center's
surface.
Gas emissions are monitored with equipment such
as the Correlation Spectrometer (COSPEC) which analyzes the
presence of volcanic
gases such as sulfur
dioxide. Increased emissions possibly signal an impending
volcanic eruption.
Other geophysical
techniques (electrical, gravity and magnetic observations)
include monitoring fluctuations and sudden change in resistivity,
gravity anomalies or magnetic anomaly patterns which may indicate
volcano-induced faulting and magma upwelling.
Stratigraphic
analyses includes analyzing tephra and lava deposits and
dating these to give volcano eruption patterns, with estimated
cycles of intense activity and size of eruptions.
Famous volcanologists
See also :Category:Volcanologists- Plato
- Pliny the Elder
- Pliny the Younger
- George-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (1707-1788)
- James Hutton (1726-1797)
- Déodat Gratet de Dolomieu (1750-1801)
- David A. Johnston, killed during the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens
- Katia and Maurice Krafft, died at Mount Unzen in Japan
- Haroun Tazieff, advisor to the French Government and Jacques Cousteau
References
External links
vulcanology in Arabic: علم البراكين
vulcanology in Breton: Volkanegezh
vulcanology in Bulgarian: Вулканология
vulcanology in Catalan: Vulcanologia
vulcanology in Czech: Vulkanologie
vulcanology in German: Vulkanologie
vulcanology in Estonian: Vulkanoloogia
vulcanology in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ηφαιστειολογία
vulcanology in Spanish: Vulcanología
vulcanology in Esperanto: Vulkanologio
vulcanology in Basque: Bulkanologia
vulcanology in French: Volcanologie
vulcanology in Friulian: Vulcanologjie
vulcanology in Galician: Vulcanoloxía
vulcanology in Indonesian: Vulkanologi
vulcanology in Italian: Vulcanologia
vulcanology in Hebrew: וולקנולוגיה
vulcanology in Luxembourgish: Vulkanologie
vulcanology in Lithuanian: Vulkanologija
vulcanology in Dutch: Vulkanologie
vulcanology in Japanese: 火山学
vulcanology in Norwegian: Vulkanologi
vulcanology in Polish: Wulkanologia
vulcanology in Portuguese: Vulcanologia
vulcanology in Russian: Вулканология
vulcanology in Sicilian: Vulcanuluggìa
vulcanology in Simple English: Volcanology
vulcanology in Slovak: Vulkanológia
vulcanology in Swedish: Vulkanologi
vulcanology in Finnish: Vulkanologia
vulcanology in Turkish: Yanardağbilimi
vulcanology in Ukrainian: Вулканологія
vulcanology in Chinese: 火山学