Some volcanoes erupt like a boiling pot that spills over, while others just bubble like a slow, gentle tea kettle.
Imagine you have two pots on the stove: one is filled with water and salt, the other only with water. When you heat them both up, the first one might boil over, making a mess, while the second one just makes soft bubbles. That’s like what happens inside volcanoes!
What Makes a Volcano Angry?
Volcanoes are like those pots. Inside them is magma, which is hot rock that flows like lava. If the magma has a lot of gas in it, when it comes out, it can make a big eruption, like when you open a shaken soda bottle and it fizzes up!
What Makes a Volcano Calm?
If the magma doesn’t have much gas, it just oozes out slowly, like honey coming out of a jar. This kind of volcano makes little bubbles or even just a steady flow of lava.
So, some volcanoes are angry and erupt loudly, while others are calm and bubble gently, all because of what's inside them!
Examples
- Volcanoes can act differently based on how full their magma chamber is and what kind of rock is around them.
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See also
- How Do Volcanoes Shape Continents?
- How Does Volcanic eruption explained - Steven Anderson Work?
- What are volcanic islands?
- What Is the Difference Between Volcanoes and Earthquakes?
- What is rhyolitic?