There are many different types of volcanoes beyond the Hollywood version of a tall conical mountain. Some of the main types include shield volcanoes, which are broad with flat tops and low slopes like those in Hawaii; composite volcanoes like Mount Fuji which are tall and steep; cinder cones which are small, steep-sided mounds formed from loose debris; and submarine volcanoes common on ocean floors, which form underwater without disturbing the surface. Fissure volcanoes have cracks that erupt vast quantities of lava to form flat plains rather than a central mountain.
Characteristics of different volcanoes and their typesManojSaini01
油
Volcanoes can be classified in several ways:
1) By frequency of eruption - active, dormant, or extinct
2) By shape and mode of eruption - shield, composite, caldera, cinder cone, lava domes
3) By lava composition - those with basic or acidic lava
Other types include supervolcanoes, flood basalt provinces, and submarine volcanoes. Volcanoes form due to pressure from magma escaping through cracks in the earth's crust.
This document classifies and describes the different types of volcanoes. It discusses 7 main types: fissure volcanoes which erupt from cracks without a central crater; composite volcanoes which are tall and symmetrical with layers of lava and ash like Mount Fuji; shield volcanoes which are broad with low slopes like those in Hawaii; cinder cones which are steep-sided hills formed from pyroclastic debris; lava domes which form bulbous masses that pile around vents; supervolcanoes which are extremely large and dangerous, capable of global cooling like Yellowstone Caldera; and submarine volcanoes which are common on ocean floors, often forming pillow lava and hydrothermal vents.
There are several different types of volcanoes including composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, cinder cones, and fissure volcanoes. Composite volcanoes are tall and symmetrical with steep sides, sometimes rising over 10,000 feet high and made of layers of lava, ash, and cinders. Shield volcanoes are broad with low slopes and large central craters, such as the volcanoes in Hawaii built from outpourings of lava. Cinder cones are small, steep-sided hills formed from eruptions at a single vent that eject cinders and form piles around the vent. Fissure volcanoes have cracks in the ground that emit lava to form wide, flat flows rather than a central mountain feature.
Science 9 Quarter 3; Types of volcano cone shapes.pptxteleganne21
油
Volcanoes come in different types based on their shape and formation process. The main types are composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, cinder cone volcanoes, dome volcanoes, caldera volcanoes, and fissure volcanoes. Composite volcanoes are tall with wide bases and layers of solidified material. Shield volcanoes have low, broad dome shapes due to slow moving lava. Cinder cones are small and steep with loose debris. Dome volcanoes form rounded mounds from thick, slow moving lava. Calderas are large depressions formed when the volcano collapses after an eruption. Fissure volcanoes erupt from cracks without a central vent.
Volcanoes are formed when magma from the Earth's upper mantle works its way to the surface and erupts. There are over 1,500 active volcanoes on Earth. Volcanic eruptions occur when pressure builds up from magma and gases below the Earth's crust, causing rock and lava to shoot from the volcano in explosive eruptions. Eruptions can cause dangerous flows of lava, ash, mudslides and floods that threaten nearby areas.
This document summarizes the different types of volcanoes:
Fissure volcanoes erupt from long cracks in the ground, spreading vast quantities of lava over wide areas to form flat plains. Cinder cones are small, steep-sided hills formed from eruptions at a single vent that eject fragments of lava. Composite or strato-volcanoes are tall and symmetrical with alternating layers of lava and ash, such as Mount Fuji. Shield volcanoes have broad, low slopes and large craters, exemplified by Hawaiian volcanoes formed from numerous lava flows over great distances.
This document provides information about different types of volcanoes. It describes volcanoes as vents where hot gases, rocks, and lava are ejected from the Earth's surface. Volcanoes form at plate boundaries, and can also form when plates separate under the ocean. The document then classifies volcanoes according to their shape (cinder cone, shield, composite) and activity level (active, dormant, extinct). Specific examples are given for each type of volcano classification.
This document discusses volcanoes, including how they form, the different types of volcanoes, and where they are located. It provides details on four main types of volcanoes: cinder cones, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes. Cinder cones are simple structures built from ejected cinders. Composite volcanoes are large symmetrical cones made of layers of material. Shield volcanoes are broad structures composed of fluid lava flows. Lava domes are small, bulbous masses that pile over the vent. Volcanoes can be located both under water and on land.
This presentation summarizes four main types of volcanoes: cinder cone volcanoes, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes. Cinder cone volcanoes are built from particles of congealed lava ejected from a single vent. Composite volcanoes are formed from layers of lava and rock fragments. Shield volcanoes are built primarily from fluid lava flows using lava tubes. Lava domes are formed from masses of thick, slow-moving lava that pile up around the vent.
A volcano is a rupture in the crust of a planetary-mass object, such as Earth, that allows hot lava, volcanic ash, and gases to escape from a magma chamber below the surface.
The parts of volcano are crater, vent, magma, magma chamber
The document provides information about volcanoes and volcanic landforms and processes. It defines key terms like caldera, crater, lava, magma, tuff, and describes different types of volcanoes like Hawaiian, Strombolian, Vulcanian, and Vesuvius. It also summarizes the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines, which was the second largest terrestrial eruption of the 20th century and ejected around 10 cubic km of magma and 20 million tons of sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere.
Volcanoes form when magma leaks through the earth's crust and onto the surface. The word "volcano" comes from the island of Vulcano near Italy, named for the Roman god of fire Vulcan. There are over 1500 active volcanoes on earth, located primarily on tectonic plate boundaries. The three main types of volcanoes are composite, cinder, and shield. When magma pushes through the crust, it can erupt violently or gently flow as lava, depending on the volcano type and magma viscosity.
All about Volcanoes (presented by Angel) .pptxSheluMayConde
油
All About Volcanoes
Volcanoes are remarkable geological structures formed by the eruption of molten rock, ash, and gases from the Earth's mantle. These natural phenomena can shape landscapes, create new landforms, and significantly impact both the environment and human societies. Understanding volcanoes involves exploring their types, formation processes, eruption mechanisms, and effects.
What is a Volcano?
A volcano is an opening in the Earth's crust through which magma, gases, and ash are expelled. When magma reaches the surface, it is called lava. Over time, repeated eruptions can build up a mountain or other landform around the volcanic vent.
Types of Volcanoes:
Shield Volcanoes:
Characteristics: Broad, gently sloping sides formed by the flow of low-viscosity basaltic lava that can travel long distances.
Examples: Mauna Loa and Kilauea in Hawaii.
Composite Volcanoes (Stratovolcanoes):
Characteristics: Steep, conical volcanoes made up of alternating layers of lava, ash, and volcanic debris. They are known for their explosive eruptions.
Examples: Mount Fuji in Japan, Mount St. Helens in the USA, and Mount Vesuvius in Italy.
Cinder Cone Volcanoes:
Characteristics: Small, steep-sided cones built from volcanic fragments such as ash, tephra, and volcanic rocks ejected during eruptions.
Examples: Par鱈cutin in Mexico and Sunset Crater in the USA.
Lava Domes:
Characteristics: Rounded, steep-sided mounds formed by the slow extrusion of viscous lava.
Examples: Mount St. Helens Lava Dome in the USA.
Volcanic Features:
Crater:
Description: A bowl-shaped depression at the summit of a volcano, typically formed by explosive eruptions.
Caldera:
Description: A large depression formed when a volcano's summit collapses or is blown away during a massive eruption.
Examples: Yellowstone Caldera in the USA.
Lava Flows:
Description: Streams of molten rock that pour from a volcanic vent and solidify as they cool.
Pyroclastic Flows:
Description: Fast-moving currents of hot gas and volcanic material that can travel down the sides of a volcano during explosive eruptions.
Volcanic Ash:
Description: Fine particles of pulverized rock and glass created during volcanic eruptions that can travel long distances.
Formation of Volcanoes:
Subduction Zones:
Description: Volcanoes often form at convergent plate boundaries where an oceanic plate subducts beneath a continental plate, leading to magma formation.
Examples: The Ring of Fire around the Pacific Ocean.
Rift Zones:
Description: Volcanoes can also form at divergent plate boundaries where tectonic plates are pulling apart, allowing magma to rise.
Examples: Mid-Atlantic Ridge and East African Rift.
Hotspots:
Description: Volcanic activity that occurs away from plate boundaries, caused by plumes of hot material rising from deep within the mantle.
Examples: Hawaiian Islands and Yellowstone.
Volcanoes form when magma leaks through the earth's crust and onto the surface. The word "volcano" comes from Vulcan, the Roman god of fire believed to live within volcanoes. There are over 1500 active volcanoes worldwide, with most located along tectonic plate boundaries in the "Ring of Fire" in the Pacific Ocean. The three main types of volcanoes are composite, cinder, and shield volcanoes, which erupt in different ways.
Volcanoes form when magma leaks through the earth's crust and onto the surface. There are over 1500 active volcanoes worldwide, with most located around the Pacific Ring of Fire. Volcanoes are classified as active, dormant, or extinct depending on recent eruption activity. The three main types are composite, cinder, and shield volcanoes. The largest active volcano is Mauna Loa in Hawaii. Other planets like Mars and Jupiter's moon Io also have volcanoes.
There are several main types of volcanoes classified based on their shape, eruptive behavior, and composition. Composite volcanoes, also known as stratovolcanoes, are conical mountains built up by viscous lava flows and explosive eruptions, examples being Mount St. Helens and Mount Pinatubo. Shield volcanoes are larger and less steeply sloped, constructed by fluid basaltic lava flows like those of Hawaii. Small cinder cones form from explosive eruptions of pyroclastic material. Fissure eruptions produce fluid lava flows from cracks in the crust along zones of weakness.
Volcanoes form at plate boundaries where tectonic plates are diverging or converging. There are three main types of volcanoes based on location: shield volcanoes at divergent boundaries, stratovolcanoes at subduction zones, and hotspots formed by mantle plumes. Volcanoes pose hazards from lava flows, explosions, and ashfall. Classification systems describe volcanoes based on activity levels from dormant to active. Monitoring systems use alert levels and colors to communicate volcanic unrest and eruptions.
Volcanoes form and shape the Earth's surface over long periods of time. More than 80% of the Earth's surface is of volcanic origin. Volcanoes are openings where molten rock and gases erupt from underground reservoirs of magma. Magma forms from melted rock in the upper mantle that rises toward the surface. When magma reaches the surface, it is called lava. There are four main types of volcanoes: cinder cones, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes, which differ based on their structure and eruption characteristics. Volcanic eruptions can range from non-explosive effusive eruptions to explosive eruptions that violently eject pyroclasts and
Volcanoes form when molten rock escapes through openings in the earth's crust. There are over 500 active volcanoes worldwide, with 75% located on the Ring of Fire around the Pacific Ocean. The main types of volcanoes are cinder cones, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes, which vary based on the viscosity of the erupted lava and shape of the volcanic feature. Cinder cones are small and steep, while shield volcanoes are broad and gently sloping due to highly fluid lava flows. Composite and lava dome volcanoes have more explosive eruptions of viscous magma.
Volcanoes form along tectonic plate boundaries where one plate subducts under another. Most volcanoes occur along the Ring of Fire in the Pacific Ocean area where many tectonic plates meet. When plates collide or one slides under another, pressure and heat cause magma to form underground. This magma can then push through the Earth's crust in places along the plate boundaries to erupt as volcanoes. The Ring of Fire sees frequent volcanic activity because it has many locations where plates are subducting or sliding past one another, generating magma and fueling volcanoes over long chains and arcs around the Pacific Ocean margin.
The document discusses different types of volcanoes and how they can change Earth's surface quickly. It describes cinder cone, shield cone, and composite cone volcanoes. Cinder cones are small and circular, forming from ejected cinders. Shield cones are large and shield-shaped, building up from lava flows. Composite cones like Mount St. Helens are steep-sided and cone-shaped, often erupting explosively due to trapped viscous magma. Volcanoes can quickly change Earth's surface through lava flows and explosive eruptions that spread rock and ash over wide areas.
what are Volcanism and volcano,
Distribution of Volcanoes
Kinds of Volcanoes
Types of Volcanic Hazards
Preparing for Volcanic Emergencies
A volcano is generally a conical shaped hill or mountain built by accumulations of lava flows, tephra, and volcanic ash. About 95% of active volcanoes occur at the plate subduction zones and at the mid-oceanic ridges. The other 5% occur in areas associated with lithospheric hot spots. These hot spots have no direct relationships with areas of crustal creation or subduction zones. It is believed that hot spots are caused by plumes of rising magma that have their origin within the asthenosphere.
Over the last 2 million years, volcanoes have been depositing lava, tephra, and ash in particular areas of the globe. These areas occur at hot spots, rift zones, and along plate boundaries where tectonic subduction is taking place within the asthenosphere.
The most prevalent kinds of volcanoes on the Earth's surface are the kind which form the "Pacific Rim of Fire". Those are volcanoes which form as a result of subduction of the nearby lithosphere.
Volcanoes form at constructive and destructive plate boundaries. At constructive boundaries, volcanoes form as magma rises through gaps created as plates move apart. These volcanoes are usually shield volcanoes. At destructive boundaries, one plate is subducted and melts, creating excess magma that erupts violently as composite volcanoes. Volcanoes can be active and currently erupting, dormant but capable of future eruptions, or extinct and not likely to erupt again. Hot spot volcanoes form from stationary plumes of magma rising through weak crust, creating island chains as plates move over hot spots.
This document discusses volcanoes, including how they form, the different types of volcanoes, and where they are located. It provides details on four main types of volcanoes: cinder cones, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes. Cinder cones are simple structures built from ejected cinders. Composite volcanoes are large symmetrical cones made of layers of material. Shield volcanoes are broad structures composed of fluid lava flows. Lava domes are small, bulbous masses that pile over the vent. Volcanoes can be located both under water and on land.
This presentation summarizes four main types of volcanoes: cinder cone volcanoes, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes. Cinder cone volcanoes are built from particles of congealed lava ejected from a single vent. Composite volcanoes are formed from layers of lava and rock fragments. Shield volcanoes are built primarily from fluid lava flows using lava tubes. Lava domes are formed from masses of thick, slow-moving lava that pile up around the vent.
A volcano is a rupture in the crust of a planetary-mass object, such as Earth, that allows hot lava, volcanic ash, and gases to escape from a magma chamber below the surface.
The parts of volcano are crater, vent, magma, magma chamber
The document provides information about volcanoes and volcanic landforms and processes. It defines key terms like caldera, crater, lava, magma, tuff, and describes different types of volcanoes like Hawaiian, Strombolian, Vulcanian, and Vesuvius. It also summarizes the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines, which was the second largest terrestrial eruption of the 20th century and ejected around 10 cubic km of magma and 20 million tons of sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere.
Volcanoes form when magma leaks through the earth's crust and onto the surface. The word "volcano" comes from the island of Vulcano near Italy, named for the Roman god of fire Vulcan. There are over 1500 active volcanoes on earth, located primarily on tectonic plate boundaries. The three main types of volcanoes are composite, cinder, and shield. When magma pushes through the crust, it can erupt violently or gently flow as lava, depending on the volcano type and magma viscosity.
All about Volcanoes (presented by Angel) .pptxSheluMayConde
油
All About Volcanoes
Volcanoes are remarkable geological structures formed by the eruption of molten rock, ash, and gases from the Earth's mantle. These natural phenomena can shape landscapes, create new landforms, and significantly impact both the environment and human societies. Understanding volcanoes involves exploring their types, formation processes, eruption mechanisms, and effects.
What is a Volcano?
A volcano is an opening in the Earth's crust through which magma, gases, and ash are expelled. When magma reaches the surface, it is called lava. Over time, repeated eruptions can build up a mountain or other landform around the volcanic vent.
Types of Volcanoes:
Shield Volcanoes:
Characteristics: Broad, gently sloping sides formed by the flow of low-viscosity basaltic lava that can travel long distances.
Examples: Mauna Loa and Kilauea in Hawaii.
Composite Volcanoes (Stratovolcanoes):
Characteristics: Steep, conical volcanoes made up of alternating layers of lava, ash, and volcanic debris. They are known for their explosive eruptions.
Examples: Mount Fuji in Japan, Mount St. Helens in the USA, and Mount Vesuvius in Italy.
Cinder Cone Volcanoes:
Characteristics: Small, steep-sided cones built from volcanic fragments such as ash, tephra, and volcanic rocks ejected during eruptions.
Examples: Par鱈cutin in Mexico and Sunset Crater in the USA.
Lava Domes:
Characteristics: Rounded, steep-sided mounds formed by the slow extrusion of viscous lava.
Examples: Mount St. Helens Lava Dome in the USA.
Volcanic Features:
Crater:
Description: A bowl-shaped depression at the summit of a volcano, typically formed by explosive eruptions.
Caldera:
Description: A large depression formed when a volcano's summit collapses or is blown away during a massive eruption.
Examples: Yellowstone Caldera in the USA.
Lava Flows:
Description: Streams of molten rock that pour from a volcanic vent and solidify as they cool.
Pyroclastic Flows:
Description: Fast-moving currents of hot gas and volcanic material that can travel down the sides of a volcano during explosive eruptions.
Volcanic Ash:
Description: Fine particles of pulverized rock and glass created during volcanic eruptions that can travel long distances.
Formation of Volcanoes:
Subduction Zones:
Description: Volcanoes often form at convergent plate boundaries where an oceanic plate subducts beneath a continental plate, leading to magma formation.
Examples: The Ring of Fire around the Pacific Ocean.
Rift Zones:
Description: Volcanoes can also form at divergent plate boundaries where tectonic plates are pulling apart, allowing magma to rise.
Examples: Mid-Atlantic Ridge and East African Rift.
Hotspots:
Description: Volcanic activity that occurs away from plate boundaries, caused by plumes of hot material rising from deep within the mantle.
Examples: Hawaiian Islands and Yellowstone.
Volcanoes form when magma leaks through the earth's crust and onto the surface. The word "volcano" comes from Vulcan, the Roman god of fire believed to live within volcanoes. There are over 1500 active volcanoes worldwide, with most located along tectonic plate boundaries in the "Ring of Fire" in the Pacific Ocean. The three main types of volcanoes are composite, cinder, and shield volcanoes, which erupt in different ways.
Volcanoes form when magma leaks through the earth's crust and onto the surface. There are over 1500 active volcanoes worldwide, with most located around the Pacific Ring of Fire. Volcanoes are classified as active, dormant, or extinct depending on recent eruption activity. The three main types are composite, cinder, and shield volcanoes. The largest active volcano is Mauna Loa in Hawaii. Other planets like Mars and Jupiter's moon Io also have volcanoes.
There are several main types of volcanoes classified based on their shape, eruptive behavior, and composition. Composite volcanoes, also known as stratovolcanoes, are conical mountains built up by viscous lava flows and explosive eruptions, examples being Mount St. Helens and Mount Pinatubo. Shield volcanoes are larger and less steeply sloped, constructed by fluid basaltic lava flows like those of Hawaii. Small cinder cones form from explosive eruptions of pyroclastic material. Fissure eruptions produce fluid lava flows from cracks in the crust along zones of weakness.
Volcanoes form at plate boundaries where tectonic plates are diverging or converging. There are three main types of volcanoes based on location: shield volcanoes at divergent boundaries, stratovolcanoes at subduction zones, and hotspots formed by mantle plumes. Volcanoes pose hazards from lava flows, explosions, and ashfall. Classification systems describe volcanoes based on activity levels from dormant to active. Monitoring systems use alert levels and colors to communicate volcanic unrest and eruptions.
Volcanoes form and shape the Earth's surface over long periods of time. More than 80% of the Earth's surface is of volcanic origin. Volcanoes are openings where molten rock and gases erupt from underground reservoirs of magma. Magma forms from melted rock in the upper mantle that rises toward the surface. When magma reaches the surface, it is called lava. There are four main types of volcanoes: cinder cones, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes, which differ based on their structure and eruption characteristics. Volcanic eruptions can range from non-explosive effusive eruptions to explosive eruptions that violently eject pyroclasts and
Volcanoes form when molten rock escapes through openings in the earth's crust. There are over 500 active volcanoes worldwide, with 75% located on the Ring of Fire around the Pacific Ocean. The main types of volcanoes are cinder cones, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes, which vary based on the viscosity of the erupted lava and shape of the volcanic feature. Cinder cones are small and steep, while shield volcanoes are broad and gently sloping due to highly fluid lava flows. Composite and lava dome volcanoes have more explosive eruptions of viscous magma.
Volcanoes form along tectonic plate boundaries where one plate subducts under another. Most volcanoes occur along the Ring of Fire in the Pacific Ocean area where many tectonic plates meet. When plates collide or one slides under another, pressure and heat cause magma to form underground. This magma can then push through the Earth's crust in places along the plate boundaries to erupt as volcanoes. The Ring of Fire sees frequent volcanic activity because it has many locations where plates are subducting or sliding past one another, generating magma and fueling volcanoes over long chains and arcs around the Pacific Ocean margin.
The document discusses different types of volcanoes and how they can change Earth's surface quickly. It describes cinder cone, shield cone, and composite cone volcanoes. Cinder cones are small and circular, forming from ejected cinders. Shield cones are large and shield-shaped, building up from lava flows. Composite cones like Mount St. Helens are steep-sided and cone-shaped, often erupting explosively due to trapped viscous magma. Volcanoes can quickly change Earth's surface through lava flows and explosive eruptions that spread rock and ash over wide areas.
what are Volcanism and volcano,
Distribution of Volcanoes
Kinds of Volcanoes
Types of Volcanic Hazards
Preparing for Volcanic Emergencies
A volcano is generally a conical shaped hill or mountain built by accumulations of lava flows, tephra, and volcanic ash. About 95% of active volcanoes occur at the plate subduction zones and at the mid-oceanic ridges. The other 5% occur in areas associated with lithospheric hot spots. These hot spots have no direct relationships with areas of crustal creation or subduction zones. It is believed that hot spots are caused by plumes of rising magma that have their origin within the asthenosphere.
Over the last 2 million years, volcanoes have been depositing lava, tephra, and ash in particular areas of the globe. These areas occur at hot spots, rift zones, and along plate boundaries where tectonic subduction is taking place within the asthenosphere.
The most prevalent kinds of volcanoes on the Earth's surface are the kind which form the "Pacific Rim of Fire". Those are volcanoes which form as a result of subduction of the nearby lithosphere.
Volcanoes form at constructive and destructive plate boundaries. At constructive boundaries, volcanoes form as magma rises through gaps created as plates move apart. These volcanoes are usually shield volcanoes. At destructive boundaries, one plate is subducted and melts, creating excess magma that erupts violently as composite volcanoes. Volcanoes can be active and currently erupting, dormant but capable of future eruptions, or extinct and not likely to erupt again. Hot spot volcanoes form from stationary plumes of magma rising through weak crust, creating island chains as plates move over hot spots.
The document discusses the particle theory of matter, which states that all matter is composed of tiny particles that attract one another and are always in motion. It explains how scientific models like the particle theory help represent invisible processes in nature. The document also examines the states of matter, changes of state, classifying matter as homogeneous or heterogeneous, and distinguishing between physical and chemical changes and properties.
The document discusses 10 unifying themes of life that apply across all levels of biological organization:
1) Biological systems form interacting networks from cells to ecosystems.
2) All living things are composed of cells, which are specialized and interact.
3) An organism's structure determines its functions like a bird's wing shape enabling different flight styles.
4) Inherited genetic information is passed from parents to offspring, directing development.
5) Organisms continuously interact with and respond to their environments.
6) Energy from the sun or food is required for all life activities and is lost as heat.
7) Organisms regulate internal conditions to maintain homeostasis despite external changes.
8) Evolution and natural selection create
This document provides an overview of addition and includes exercises for practicing addition. It begins with introducing addition and what it means to add numbers together. It then presents examples of horizontal and vertical addition. Later sections include pairs of numbers that add up to 10, mental calculation exercises, and visual exercises involving addition of objects like people on a bus or ducks. The document aims to help students learn and practice the concept of addition.
This document discusses the natural resources found in the Philippines. It begins by introducing the learning objectives, which are to identify Philippine natural resources based on a video, explain how human activities affect resources, and discuss reducing negative impacts. It then lists various natural resources like air, water, plants, animals, and minerals. Specific to the Philippines, it highlights water forms like bays, lakes, falls, gulfs, rivers, and straits. It also discusses endemic species and mineral deposits found in the country like gold, copper, and limestone. The document notes how these are located near volcanoes and rivers. In closing, it briefly touches on energy resources in the Philippines like solar, geothermal, and wind energy.
The document outlines the performance rating scale and objectives for evaluating teachers in the Philippines under a Results-Based Performance Management System. It describes the characteristics and expectations for ratings of Outstanding, Very Satisfactory, Satisfactory, Unsatisfactory and Poor. It also lists the Key Result Areas (KRAs) of Content Knowledge and Pedagogy, Learning Environment, Diversity of Learners, Community Linkages, and Personal Growth. Specific objectives and measures of verification are provided for each KRA to guide evaluations.
The document summarizes the key aspects of establishing an environmentally friendly school system. It outlines the standards and certification process for environmentally sustainable schools. A positive school environment incorporates appropriate facilities, well-managed classrooms, health supports, and disciplinary policies. The document then details several environmental policies students and teachers should follow, including proper waste disposal and recycling. It recommends establishing environmental clubs and starting waste segregation at the classroom level. The document also provides tips for energy conservation programs, paper conservation, greening programs, and alternative transportation options to make schools more eco-friendly.
ED96 INTELLIGENT REPORT BY MARFE JAN MONTELIBANO.pptxMarfeMontelibano2
油
Filipinos are considered intelligent based on several factors:
1) They have quick perception, retentive memory, and are very teachable, according to an American educator.
2) They have a talent for languages as exemplified by Dr. Jose Rizal who knew 22 languages, and there are 55 languages and 142 dialects in the Philippines.
3) Filipinos are the only Asian nation that speaks English and Spanish and have literature in these languages, and are the third largest English-speaking country.
AI and Academic Writing, Short Term Course in Academic Writing and Publication, UGC-MMTTC, MANUU, 25/02/2025, Prof. (Dr.) Vinod Kumar Kanvaria, University of Delhi, vinodpr111@gmail.com
How to Configure Deliver Content by Email in Odoo 18 SalesCeline George
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In this slide, well discuss on how to configure proforma invoice in Odoo 18 Sales module. A proforma invoice is a preliminary invoice that serves as a commercial document issued by a seller to a buyer.
Effective Product Variant Management in Odoo 18Celine George
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In this slide well discuss on the effective product variant management in Odoo 18. Odoo concentrates on managing product variations and offers a distinct area for doing so. Product variants provide unique characteristics like size and color to single products, which can be managed at the product template level for all attributes and variants or at the variant level for individual variants.
How to create security group category in Odoo 17Celine George
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Odoo 18 Accounting Access Rights - Odoo 18 際際滷sCeline George
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Research Publication & Ethics contains a chapter on Intellectual Honesty and Research Integrity.
Different case studies of intellectual dishonesty and integrity were discussed.
4. PICTURE TALK
Identify the pictures below and answer the following
questions.
Guide Questions:
a. Have you been to these places
before?
b. In what particular places in
the Philippines can we find these
places?
c. What are common/similar in
the pictures presented?
12. Most people have never seen a real volcano but have
learned about them through movies or books.
So when most people think of a volcano, they usually conjure
up the Hollywood version: a huge,
menacing conical mountain that explodes and spews out
masses of lava which falls on rampaging
dinosaurs, screaming cave people, or fleeing mobs of
betogaed Romans - depending on their favorite
volcano disaster movie. While those types of volcanoes do
indeed exist, they represent only one
"species" in a veritable zoo of volcano shapes and sizes.
introduction
13. Cinder cones
VOLCANOES
Cinder cones are simple volcanoes which have a bowl-
shaped crater at the summit and steep sides.
They only grow to about a thousand feet, the size of a hill.
They usually are created of eruptions from a single
opening, unlike a strato-volcano or shield volcano which
can erupt from many different openings.
Cinder cones are typically are made of piles of lava, not
ash.
14. A cinder cone or scoria cone is a steep conical hill of tephra
(volcanic debris) that accumulates around and downwind
from a volcanic vent .
They consist of loose pyroclastic debris formed by explosive
eruptions or lava fountains from a single, typically
cylindrical, vent.
As the gas-charged lava is blown violently into the air, it
breaks into small fragments that solidify and fall as either
cinders, clinkers, or scoria around the vent to form a cone
that often is beautifully symmetrical; with slopes between
30-40属; and a nearly circular ground plan.
Cinder cones
VOLCANOES
15. Cinder cones
VOLCANOES
Most cinder cones have a bowl-shaped crater at the
summit. During the eruption, blobs ("cinders") of
lava are blown into the air and break into small
fragments that fall around the opening of the
volcano. The pile forms an oval-shaped small
volcano.
Famous cinder cones include Paricutin in
Mexico and the one in the middle of Crater Lake in
Oregon.
17. COMPOSITE VOLCANOES
The most majestic of the volcanoes are composite
volcanoes, also known as strato-volcanoes.
Composite volcanoes are tall, symetrically shaped, with
steep sides, sometimes rising 10,000 feet high. They are
built of alternating layers of lava flows, volcanic ash, and
cinders.
Famous composite volcanoes include Mount Fuji in Japan,
Mount Shasta and Mount Lassen in California, Mount St.
Helens and Mount Rainier in Washington State, Mount Hood
in Oregon, and Mount Etna in Italy.
19. Shield volcanoes can grow to be very big. In fact,
the oldest continental regions of Earth may be the remains
of ancient shield volcanoes.
Shield volcanoes are tall and broad with flat,
rounded shapes. They have low slopes and almost always
have large craters at their summits. The Hawaiian
volcanoes exemplify the common type of shield volcano.
They are built by countless outpourings of lava that
advance great distances from a central summit vent or
group of vents.
SHIELD VOLCANOES
20. SHIELD VOLCANOES
The outpourings of lava are typically not
accompanied by pyroclastic material, which make the
shield volcanoes relatively safe during eruptions.
Mauna Loa, a shield volcano on the "big" island of
Hawaii, is the largest single mountain in the world, rising
over 30,000 feet above the ocean floor and reaching
almost 100 miles across at its base. Other famous shield
volcanoes include Kilauea, also in Hawaii, and Olympus
Mons of Mars.
22. Volcanic or lava domes are formed by relatively
small, bulbous masses of lava too viscous to flow any
great distance; consequently, on extrusion, the lava piles
over and around its vent. A dome grows largely by
expansion from within. As it grows its outer surface cools
and hardens, then shatters, spilling loose fragments down
its sides. Some domes form craggy knobs or spines over
the volcanic vent, whereas others form short, steep-sided
lava flows known as coulees.
Volcanic domes commonly occur within the craters
or on the flanks of large composite volcanoes.
Lava domes
VOLCANOES
24. questions:
We will have a quiz, get 村 sheet of paper.
Multiple Choice
1. Occur when material significantly warmer than its surroundings is erupted onto
the surface of a planet or moon from its interior.
a. Magma c. Ash
b. Lava d. Volcano
2. It is usually a cone shaped mountain or hill that opens downward to a pool of
molten rock
below the surface of the earth.
a. Valley c. Hill
b. Volcano d. Ridge
25. 3.It is also called stratovolcano
a. Composite Volcano
b. Shield volcano
c. Lava Dome Volcano
d. Cinder cone Volcano
4. It is the largest volcano that erupts fluid
a. Shield c. Cinder Cone
b. Composite d. Lava Dome
5. Simplest type of volcano
a. Composite c. Cinder Cone
b. Shield d. Stratovolcano
#6: Okay class before we proceed to our new topic lets have a game. I will present some pictures and complete the given word. You can answer it in the chat box cooperate with our game.
#7: Okay class before we proceed to our new topic lets have a game. I will present some pictures and complete the given word. You can answer it in the chat box cooperate with our game.
#8: Okay class before we proceed to our new topic lets have a game. I will present some pictures and complete the given word. You can answer it in the chat box cooperate with our game.