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Photo glossary of volcano terms

Sketch of a debris avalanche occuring on a volcano
Sketch and animation by B. Myers

A debris avalanche rushes down the side of a volcano to the valley floor. Many such debris avalanches transform into lahars and travel tens of kilometers from the volcano. Note horseshoe shaped crater on volcano's side, which is the scar created by the avalanche.

Animation sequence (Quicktime®, 1.2 Mb)

Debris avalanche
Debris avalanches are moving masses of rock, soil and snow that occur when the flank of a mountain or volcano collapses and slides downslope. As the moving debris rushes down a volcano and into river valleys, it incorporates water, snow, trees, bridges, buildings, and anything else in the way. Debris avalanches may travel several kilometers before coming to rest, or they may transform into more water-rich lahars, which travel many tens of kilometers downstream.

Case studies volcano debris avalanches (landslides)

Historical debris avalanches

Pre-historical debris avalanches

 

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U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, California, USA
URL http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/DebrisAvalanche.html
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Last modification: Monday, 04-Sep-2000 23:17:49 EDT (SRB)