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Chapter 3.2 - Distributed Volcanic fields

Chapter 3.2 - Distributed Volcanic fields

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Authors

Gabor Kereszturi , Marie-Noëlle Guilbaud, James D.L. White, Helena Albert Minguez, Aurelie Germa, Xavier Bolós

Abstract

Distributed volcanic fields are typically low magma-flux systems, and occur in every tectonic setting. Their volcanoes are typically but not exclusively small-volume (≤1 km3 of magma). The most typical type of volcanoes associated with volcanic fields include scoria cones, tuff rings, maars, tuff cones, spatter cones, and associated lava flows, in addition to sparse medium-size shields and lava domes. Volcanic fields have spatial extents up to 10,000s km2 and in places overlap with major cities and critical infrastructure. This chapter gives an up-to-date overview on research into the geology, geochemistry and geophysics of volcanic fields, highlighting the typical physico-chemical processes responsible for their spatio-temporal evolution and associated hazards.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.31223/X5PM97

Subjects

Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Keywords

scoria cone, maar, tuff ring, volcanic field, magma batch, monogenetic, lava domes, volcanic hazard, maar, tuff ring, volcanic field, magma batch, monogenetic, lava domes, volcanic hazard

Dates

Published: 2025-06-17 16:30

Last Updated: 2025-06-17 16:30

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International