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  • Magma, formed by melting of the mantle

  • at the edge of the hotspot rises from the base at the plate

  • through cracks and fissures.

  • Erupted lava is quenched by cold water forming pillow basalt.

  • As the plate carries the volcano directly over the hotspot

  • the chemistry of the lava changes

  • to less viscous lava than the previous, more-alkali rich phase.

  • The volcano builds with repeated cycles of construction and collapse.

  • Collapse results in explosive bursts of pyroclastic material, impressive at the surface.

  • It is interbedded with pillow basalt until lava can flow above the surface.

  • Dense lava flows perch on this moderately unstable pile.

  • Large landslides are common.

  • High eruption rates increase over the center of the hot spot

  • Over hundreds of thousands of years

  • countless lava thin flows result in a broad, gently sloping shield.

  • The volcanoes are characterized by having large

  • shallow magma reservoirs that erupt frequently.

  • Summit calderas alternately build and collapsed many times in the life of a shield volcano.

  • As the volcano moves from the center of the hotspot

  • eruptions decrease and the summit magma chamber solidifies.

  • After a non-eruptive time gap renewed eruption of more-viscous

  • alkali basalt produce a steep hummocky cap on some,

  • but not all, shield volcanos.

  • These reactions are short-lived and form clusters

  • of steep-sided cinder cones.

  • Erosion becomes the chief force shaping the land surface

  • Large gullies form as erosion outpaces production

  • and steep coastal cliffs develop ass the island begins to shrink

  • due to erosion and subsidence. Coral reefs grow

  • in the shallow water around the flanks. Hundreds of thousand years

  • and several hundred kilometers from the hot spots

  • lava that was stored deep beneath the volcano rises to erupt

  • a last burst of lava. This lava is higher in alkalis than all previous eruptions.

  • Continued erosion plus the increasing weight of the cooling sea floor

  • result in the creation of extensive reefs atop the atolls.

  • As the island moves further from the buoyant affect of the hotspot

  • it continues to sink, pulling the coral reefs too deep for coral to grow.

Magma, formed by melting of the mantle

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