Phreatic eruption
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Phreatic eruptions occur when rising hot lava or magma makes contact with either ground water or surface water. The extreme temperature of the magma (600° to as high as 1,170°C) causes the water to rapidly flash to steam resulting in an explosion of steam, water, ash, blocks, and volcanic bombs. At Mount St. Helens hundreds of steam explosions preceded a 1980 plinian eruption of the volcano.
Phreatic eruptions typically do not include molten lava, just steam and solid rock fragments. The eruptions may leave a crater called a maar, typically a shallow crater. In cases where magma or lava is erupted along with the steam the eruption is called phreato-magmatic. Phreatic explosions are at times accompanied by CO2 and or H2S gas emissions which can be deadly. A phreatic eruption in Java in 1979 killed 149 people, most of whom were overcome by poisonous gases.
Kilauea volcano in Hawaii has a long record of phreatic explosions. The 1924 phreatic eruption hurled eight ton blocks of rock a distance of one kilometer.
Less intense geothermal situations create some types of mud volcanoes.
Related Site
USGS Photo Glossary Entry for Phreatic Eruption (http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/HydroVolcEruption.html)Template:Geol-stub