Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
-
[1]
USGS: Volcano Hazards Program Glossary - TuffAug 25, 2011 · Tuff is a general term for all consolidated (hardened and/or compacted) pyroclastic (explosive, volcanic origination) rocks.
-
[2]
The Underloved Tuffs of Yellowstone | U.S. Geological SurveyJul 25, 2022 · A tuff is the term for rock that is formed from ash, crystals and other volcanic debris and that is emplaced during explosive volcanic eruptions ...
-
[3]
Stop 2: Tuff Spires (U.S. National Park Service)Apr 30, 2025 · A tuff is a rock that is formed during and immediately after a violent volcanic eruption. This tuff is composed of rock crystals such as quartz and sanidine ...
-
[4]
The Bandelier Tuff near Los Alamos, New Mexico - USGS.govMay 29, 2023 · The tuff was hot and thick when it was deposited by caldera-forming eruptions 1.61 and 1.25 million years ago, and so it is welded in places, forming a dense ...
-
[5]
Tuff | Geology 1501 | ECUType, Igneous Rock. Texture, Pyroclastic. Origin, Extrusive/Volcanic. Chemical Composition, Felsic. Color, Pink. Mineral Composition, Predominantly Glass.Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
-
[6]
[PDF] volcanic tuffs and sandstones used as build- ing stones in the upper ...OTHER USES OF TERTIARY ROCKS In addition to their uses as building stone, the light-colored tuffs of this area are said to have found favor as furnace lining ...
-
[7]
Tuff - Arkansas Geological SurveyTuff is a pyroclastic rock composed mostly of angular fragments of volcanic material deposited from the air. If deposited on land while hot, the particles weld ...
-
[8]
Bishop Tuff in Long Valley Caldera, California - USGS.govThe Bishop Tuff refers to the deposits of ash and pumice ejected during the enormous eruption that created Long Valley Caldera.Missing: rock | Show results with:rock<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[9]
Ignimbrite or tuff? | U.S. Geological Survey - USGS.govSep 4, 2024 · These deposits are composed of a matrix of volcanic ash carrying a load of larger clasts - usually pumice, chunks of local rock, and scoria.
-
[10]
Volcano Hazards Program Glossary | U.S. Geological SurveyFine fragments (less than 2-4 mm in diameter) of volcanic rock formed by a volcanic explosion or ejection from a volcanic vent. Ash-flow tuff. The deposit of a ...
-
[11]
Impacts & Mitigation - Components of Ash - USGS.govDec 17, 2015 · Volcanic glass shards are fragments of the molten part of magma that cooled and solidified during eruption without mineral crystallization.Missing: pyroclastic material<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[12]
Health impacts of volcanic ash - IVHHNVolcanic ash is composed of fine particles of fragmented volcanic rock (less than 2 mm diameter). Volcanic ash is often hot very close to the volcano but is ...
-
[13]
Volcanoes: Types of Volcanic Eruptions - USGS.govFeb 5, 1997 · Volcanic eruptions range from mild steam/gas to lava, and include types like Strombolian, Vulcanian, Vesuvian, Pelean, Hawaiian, Phreatic, and ...
-
[14]
Eruption Classifications - Volcanoes, Craters & Lava Flows (U.S. ...Nov 24, 2021 · Eruption Types. The most fundamental way to characterize a volcanic eruption is whether it is magmatic, phreatic, or phreatomagmatic. molten ...
-
[15]
Questions about volcanic ash and other tephra from KīlaueaIt is also inspected under a microscope to determine composition - lithic fragments (pulverized old rocks), volcanic glass (juvenile material), or a combination ...Missing: crystal | Show results with:crystal
-
[16]
Impacts & Mitigation - Ash Particle Size - USGS.govJan 8, 2016 · Ash particle size usually decreases with distance from vent. Volcanic ash consists of fragments 2 mm or smaller in diameter and is a type of tephra.Missing: distribution initial pyroclastic flow
-
[17]
Impacts & Mitigation - Deposit Thickness - USGS.govDec 8, 2015 · The distribution of volcanic ash from the vent, and how it is deposited will depend on: the initial particle-sizes of the ejecta (which ...Missing: pyroclastic flow
-
[18]
Deposits of pyroclastic sediment gravity flowsPyroclastic flow deposits rich in pumice and glass shards are known as ignimbrite. Depending upon emplacement temperature, ignimbrites range from unconsolidated ...
-
[19]
Reading: Pyroclastic Deposits | Geology - Lumen LearningThree modes of transport can be distinguished: pyroclastic flow, pyroclastic surge, and pyroclastic fall. During Plinian eruptions, pumice and ash are formed ...
-
[20]
Volcanic Processes—Lahars (U.S. National Park Service)Apr 14, 2023 · Lahars are mixtures of water, volcanic ash, tephra, rock fragments, and chunks of ice that can flow like wet concrete.Missing: tuff | Show results with:tuff
-
[21]
Ash and Tephra Hazards from Yellowstone - USGS.govAsh and tephra fall are the most widespread volcanic hazard. Even lava-flow eruptions could include explosive phases that might produce significant volumes ...Missing: blankets | Show results with:blankets
- [22]
-
[23]
[PDF] Zeoli tic Diagenesis of Tuffs in Miocene Lacustrine Rocks near ...The tuff is not welded but is cemented by authigenic zeolites, potassium feldspar, and clay minerals, although some relict glass is locally present. The ...
-
[24]
Devitrification of Natural Glass | GSA Bulletin - GeoScienceWorldMar 2, 2017 · Devitrification along fractures in most volcanic glasses, however, is dependent upon water. In a number of samples, the width of the layer ...
-
[25]
Grain-size distribution of volcaniclastic rocks 1: A new technique ...The lithification of pyroclastic deposits is accomplished by welding of hot juvenile pyroclasts, and/or by diagenetic or hydrothermal alteration.
-
[26]
Fiamme textures in volcanic successions: Flaming issues of ...Pumice-rich clastic facies in contact with hot lavas or intrusions can be reheated and undergo welding compaction, or 'fusion' (e.g. Ross and Smith, 1961, ...<|separator|>
-
[27]
Chapter 4.1 The hydrology of tuffs - GeoScienceWorldJan 1, 2006 · Welding is dependent upon compaction of the tuff components upon or ... lithification (i.e., Moyer et al., 1996). Welding can be ...
-
[28]
Formation of Zeolites in Open Hydrologic Systems - GeoScienceWorldMar 9, 2017 · Zeolitic alteration can take place in tephra deposits when flowing or percolating ground water becomes chemically modified by hydrolysis or dissolution of ...
-
[29]
Authigenic mineralization in Surtsey basaltic tuff depositsDec 21, 2023 · Although temperature appears to be an important factor in controlling rates of secondary mineralization, the chemistry of original basaltic ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[30]
Hydrothermal alteration, rock properties in volcanic environmentHydrothermal fluids percolating through rocks interact under specific conditions such as temperature, pressure, fluid composition, and redox conditions (Frolova ...
-
[31]
[PDF] Zeolites in Tertiary tuffs along the Little Humboldt RiverMost zeolitic tuffs consist of two or more zeolites as well as authigenie clay minerals, silica minerals, or feldspar, relict glass, and crystal and rock ...
-
[32]
[PDF] Summary of the Mineralogy-Petrology of Tuffs of Yucca Mountain ...The unit also should have relatively high thermal conductivity and thermal stability; it should be strong; and, ideally, it should be situated in such a way ...
-
[33]
[PDF] Geology and Geochemistry of Tertiary Volcanic Host Rocks, Sleeper ...Lapilli tuff- Lapilli tuff with coarse clasts of many volcanic rock types, grading upward into fine-grained tuff;. 0-40 m thick. Top variably eroded.
-
[34]
Identification of mineral composition and weathering product of tuff ...Ash tuff consists of feldspars and quartz and small amount of chalcedony, calcite, dolomite, epidote and basalt fragments. Green lapilli tuff consists of ...
-
[35]
[PDF] Tuffaceous Mud is a Volumetrically Important Volcaniclastic Facies ...The ash often grades normally upward into tuffaceous mud. Less commonly, ash is transported downward into mud by bioturbation. Intimate intercalation of tuff-.
-
[36]
[PDF] Oxygen Isotopes and Trace Elements in the Tiva Canyon Tuff, Yucca ...Elements such as titanium and zirconium are typically immobile during later alteration events in volcanic rocks (Pearce and Cann, 1973) and, therefore ...
-
[37]
Tuff Rock: Volcanic Origin, Types & Textures - SandatlasJan 25, 2013 · Ignimbrite can be considered to be a special type of tuff (it is sometimes known as welded tuff although not all ignimbrites are welded). Tuff.
-
[38]
Volcanoes, Magma, and Volcanic Eruptions - Tulane UniversitySep 14, 2015 · Basaltic magma -- SiO2 45-55 wt%, high in Fe, Mg, Ca, low in K, Na; Andesitic magma -- SiO2 55-65 wt%, intermediate. in Fe, Mg, Ca, Na, K
-
[39]
4.1: Classification of Igneous Rocks - Geosciences LibreTextsAug 25, 2025 · Mafic refers to an abundance of ferromagnesian minerals (with magnesium and iron, chemical symbols Mg and Fe) plus plagioclase feldspar. It is ...
-
[40]
Distinguishing between primary and secondary volcaniclastic depositsAug 15, 2019 · Primary volcaniclastic rocks refer to fragmental products formed directly from explosive or eAusive eruption through their transport and ...
-
[41]
[PDF] QUATERNARY RHYOLITE PLATEAUThe lavas are assigned to newly named formations organized around the three ash-flow sheets of the. Yellowstone Group to represent the volcanic cycles. Rocks of ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[42]
[PDF] History of Surface Displacements at the Yellowstone Caldera ...The first caldera formed 2.1 Ma during erup- tion of the Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, a rhyolitic ash-flow sheet of more than 2,450 km3 that was emplaced over an ...
-
[43]
The Bishop Tuff: New Insights From Eruptive StratigraphyThe 0.76 Ma Bishop Tuff, from Long Valley caldera in eastern California, consists of a widespread fall deposit and voluminous partly welded ignimbrite.
-
[44]
Volumetric extrusive rates of silicic supereruptions from the Afro ...Nov 2, 2021 · While some silicic systems have produced more voluminous individual eruptions (e.g., Fish Canyon Tuff with 4500 km3 DRE) and larger cumulative ...
-
[45]
[PDF] Low- 18O Rhyolites from Yellowstone - University of OregonFlows in black are low- 18O intra-caldera lavas appearing after formation of Big Bend and Yellowstone calderas; other flows and domes are in speckled pattern.
-
[46]
Igneous Rocks - Geology (U.S. National Park Service)Nov 8, 2023 · The rocks are named with their percent by weight of silica (SiO2). From left to right, the rocks listed are: Basalt, 45-52 wt% SiO2; Basaltic ...
-
[47]
Andesite: Igneous Rock - Pictures, Definition & More - Geology.comAndesite and diorite are common rocks of the continental crust above subduction zones. They generally form after an oceanic plate melts during its descent into ...
-
[48]
Geology and Stratigraphy of the Challis Volcanic Group and Related ...Nov 23, 2016 · The andesite typically forms well-stratified deposits consisting of lava flows and tuff breccia. Volcaniclastic sedimentary rocks identical ...
-
[49]
Ignimbrites of basaltic andesite and andesite compositions from ...On-land, two series of hydroclastic deposits and ignimbrites overlie the subaerial remains of a basal, mainly effusive volcano.Missing: subduction | Show results with:subduction
-
[50]
Eruptive history of Mount Mazama and Crater Lake Caldera ...Basaltic magma from one of these vents, Forgotten Crater, intercepted the margin of the zoned intermediate to silicic magmatic system and caused eruption of ...
-
[51]
Zircon crystallization and recycling in the magma chamber of the ...Mar 9, 2017 · The nonwelded Kos Plateau Tuff deposits are dominantly fine-grained volcanic ash, tube pumices, and andesitic lithics of varying sizes (some >2 ...
-
[52]
USGS: Volcano Hazards Program Glossary - BasaltApr 8, 2015 · Basalt is a hard, black volcanic rock with less than about 52 weight percent silica (SiO2). Because of basalt's low silica content, it has a low viscosity.
-
[53]
Volcanoes and Volcanic Eruptions - Tulane UniversityAug 26, 2017 · Thus, basaltic magmas tend to be fairly fluid (low viscosity), but their viscosity is still 10,000 to 100,0000 times more viscous than water.
-
[54]
5 Explosive Volcanic Eruptions and Related Hazards - OpenGeologyExplosive eruptions do not produce lava but instead yield pyroclastic material, also sometimes called pyroclasts, or ejecta, consisting of ash and other debris ...
-
[55]
6 Igneous Rocks and Silicate Minerals – Mineralogy - OpenGeologyMost igneous rocks contain between 45 and 70 wt% silica. They range from lower-silica basalt and gabbro to higher-silica rhyolite and granite.
-
[56]
Eruption and emplacement of a basaltic welded ignimbrite during ...A gradual transition from dense rock in the interior to ash at the top of the basaltic ignimbrite reflects a decrease in welding; the shape of the welding ...
-
[57]
Surtsey island 1963 | Visit Westman Islands - Ferry HerjólfurWhen the Surtsey eruption ceased in June 1967, the volcano had produced 1.1 km3 of material, 70 % of which was tuff and 30% lava. Only 9% was above sea level ...
-
[58]
Volcanic Landforms: Extrusive Igneous - Geology (U.S. National ...Feb 25, 2025 · Magma produced at spreading centers is mafic. Therefore, much of the oceanic crust is made of basalt, a mafic rock. Some of the magma produced ...
-
[59]
The Surtsey Magma Series | Scientific Reports - NatureJun 26, 2015 · The volcanic island of Surtsey (Vestmannaeyjar, Iceland) is the product of a 3.5-year-long eruption that began in November 1963.Previous Studies On Surtsey · Discussion · Was Surtsey's Magma A...
-
[60]
[PDF] Forms of Basaltic Rocks in Hawaii - USGS Publications WarehouseAccretionary lapilli are common in it in the vicinity of Kilauea caldera. Tuff cones with broad craters are formed by ex- plosions where hot rising lava ...
-
[61]
Komatiites - ALEX STREKEISENIn the official IUGS recommendations a komatiite is defined as a high-Mg volcanic rock with 52 % > SiO2 > 30 %, MgO > 18 %, (NaO2 + K2O) < 2 % and TiO2 < 1 % ( ...
-
[62]
Large Explosive Eruptions of High-Mg Magmas Explained ... - MDPIMar 29, 2019 · Ultramafic magmas (MgO ≥ 18 wt%) are generally thought to be primary mantle melts formed at temperatures in excess of 1600 °C. Volatile ...
-
[63]
Explosive ultramafic volcanism in Phanerozoic accreted terranesMar 15, 2025 · Ultramafic volcanic rocks commonly form lava flows, sills and dikes, while pyroclastic ultramafic ... lapilli tuff and ash tuff (Milidragovic et ...
-
[64]
Ultramafic tuff: Mineral information, data and localities.Aug 14, 2025 · A rare tuff of ultramafic compsotion characterised by the abundance of olivine or serpentine and the scarcity or absence of feldspar and ...
-
[65]
Kimberlites: Earth's Diamond Delivery System | Gems & GemologyDiamonds are formed 150 to 700 km deep in Earth, and are then carried upward in a rare volcanic eruption of a kimberlite magma.The Relationship Between... · Why Do Diamonds Survive in...
-
[66]
ALEX STREKEISEN-Kimberlite-Epiclastic Rocks: These sediments represent fluvial reworking of pyroclastic material from the tuff ring in the Crater Lake formed on top of the diatreme. They ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[67]
Progressive infilling of a kimberlite pipe at Diavik, Northwest ...This study examines the crater-facies deposits filling the uppermost part of the A154N pipe at Diavik, Northwest Territories, Canada, and discusses their ...
-
[68]
[PDF] The Diavik Kimberlites - Lac de Gras, Northwest Territories, CanadaThe pyroclastic rocks include tuffs, breccias and some 'welded' tuffs, whilst debris flows range from tephra dominated 'kimberlite' to xenolith material ...
-
[69]
Mode of emplacement of Archean komatiitic tuffs and flows in the ...Key features of komatiitic magmas such as their very low viscosity and high eruption temperature are particularly favorable for phreatomagmatic pyroclastic ...
-
[70]
Spinifex texture - ALEX STREKEISENSpinifex texture includes skeletal olivine crystals and skeletal pyroxenes, sometimes with plumose pyroxenes between olivine crystals.Missing: tuffs Archaean
-
[71]
[PDF] THE FIELD CHARAGTERISTICS AND PETROLOGV OF ARGHEAN ...Ultramafic komatiites (MeO. > 20 wt. % anhydrous) are rich in olivine and occur as spinifex-textured, massive or pillowed lava flows, as bedded volcaniclastic ...
-
[72]
Physical Volcanology and Genesis of Komatiite-Associated Ni-Cu ...Aug 1, 2012 · This is true of most komatiite-associated Ni-Cu-(PGE) deposits and occurrences in the ca. 2.7 Ga Abitibi greenstone belt (Houlé and Lesher ...
- [73]
-
[74]
Community established best practice recommendations for tephra ...Jul 26, 2022 · We present comprehensive recommendations for tephra data gathering and reporting that were developed by the tephra science community to guide future ...Table 2 · Results · Tephra Geochemical Analysis<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[75]
High-resolution tephrochronology resolves stratigraphic ... - PNASPrevious geochronology in the Turkana Basin has been largely obtained through 40Ar/39Ar dating of feldspar grains collected from pumice clasts that are found ...
-
[76]
Fission-track dating of pumice from the KBS Tuff, East Rudolf, KenyaOct 28, 1976 · Fission-track dating of zircon separated from two pumice samples from the KBS Tuff in the Koobi Fora Formation, in Area 131, East Rudolf, Kenya, gives an age ...
- [77]
-
[78]
[PDF] Tephrochronology: principles, functioning, application - COREMay 20, 2011 · Introduction - what is tephrochronology? Tephrochronology is a unique method for linking and dating geological, palaeoecological,.
-
[79]
Precursors to a continental-arc ignimbrite flare-up: Early central ...Dec 20, 2023 · Dominantly intermediate-composition lavas and associated breccias (andesite, dacite) were voluminous precursors to the ignimbrite eruptions, and ...
-
[80]
Relationships between Mafic and Peralkaline Silicic Magmatism in ...Aug 6, 2025 · These rocks may be found in different tectonic settings, including continental intraplate settings, rift systems, oceanic islands and subduction ...
-
[81]
Ash-flow tuffs in the Nine Hill, Nevada, paleovalley and implications ...Aug 1, 2010 · Cenozoic ash-flow tuffs are key units for analyzing the tectonic and magmatic evolution of the Great Basin. The tuffs are commonly assumed ...Ash-Flow Tuff Stratigraphy · Paleomagnetic Data · Interbedded Clastic Rocks
-
[82]
On the formation of calderas during ignimbrite eruptionsIn the second stage, caldera collapse results from a further decrease in magma pressure, which causes the chamber roof to fracture catastrophically and deform.
-
[83]
Magma Chamber Growth During Intercaldera Periods: Insights From ...Feb 22, 2019 · Crustal magma chambers can grow to be hundreds to thousands of cubic kilometers, potentially feeding catastrophic caldera-forming eruptions.<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[84]
Complex magma mixing, mingling, and withdrawal associated with ...Nov 1, 2012 · Complex magma mixing, mingling, and withdrawal associated with an intra-Plinian ignimbrite eruption at a large silicic caldera volcano: Los ...
-
[85]
Changing mantle sources and the effects of crustal passage on the ...We couple the isotope data with major and trace element geochemical interpretation of the three-phase evolution of the Steens Basalt (Moore et al. 2018). Our ...
-
[86]
Insights from Sr Isotopes at the Phenocryst Scale, Pisgah Crater ...Distinguishing Melting of Heterogeneous Mantle Sources from Crustal Contamination: Insights from Sr Isotopes at the Phenocryst Scale, Pisgah Crater, California.
-
[87]
Zircon petrochronology in large igneous provinces reveals upper ...Jan 10, 2021 · However, disentangling mantle source heterogeneity from crustal contamination using radiogenic isotopes can be complicated, especially if ...Introduction · Camp Magmatic Province... · U--Pb Geochronology
-
[88]
Lithospheric structure of an active backarc basin: the Taupo ...The Taupo Volcanic Zone (TVZ) is a region of onshore backarc extension within continental lithosphere resulting from westward subduction of the Pacific Oceanic ...
-
[89]
A back-arc basin formed within continental lithosphereIt is proposed, therefore, that the Central Volcanic Region represents a site of active back-arc spreading within a continental lithosphere. Recommended ...
-
[90]
[PDF] Geochemistry of Ground Water Associated with Tuffaceous Rocks ...The stability of montmorillonite as a weathering ... The kinetic-reaction rates of tuffaceous rocks appear to be significant in determining chemical.
-
[91]
Low-Grade Metamorphism of Tuffaceous Rocks in the Karmutsen ...Jun 1, 2017 · Low-grade metamorphism of the tuffaceous rocks has resulted in the development of laumontite, prehnite, pumpellyite, epidote, analcime, and ...
-
[92]
[PDF] Classification of Metamorphic RocksHornfels is a type of granofels that is typically very fine-grained and compact, and occurs in contact aureoles. Hornfelses are tough, and tend to splinter ...Missing: tuff | Show results with:tuff
-
[93]
Plutonic and metamorphic xenoliths from the Cascada Tuff ... - OSTIPlutonic and metamorphic xenoliths from the Cascada Tuff, Chihuahua, Mexico, as evidence indicating the composition of the basement rocks beneath the Sierra ...
-
[94]
[PDF] NORTH CAROLINA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY AND NATURAL ...This section shows effect of dynamic, regional. metamorphism to the greenschist rank on a mafic tuff conglomerate. There is extensive development of epidote ...
-
[95]
Strain in metamorphosed volcaniclastic rocks and its bearing on the ...Orogenic belts commonly contain thick deposits of volcaniclastic and associated rock types that bear abundant strain markers.Missing: structural folding
-
[96]
Early Paleozoic ductile deformation of the South China BlockNov 27, 2023 · The east–west shear zones correspond to the last increment of deformation during the Early Paleozoic orogeny in the SCB. Acknowledgements.
-
[97]
A small city of the dead - The Etruscan necropolis in OrvietoAug 13, 2018 · Some of the tombs, made from local tuff, possess featureless rooms, while others have low benches. Etruscans practised cremation, but as was ...
-
[98]
(PDF) Orvieto : Etruscan Tree Necropolis Of Umbria - Academia.eduRoman and post-Roman eras Orvieto was annexed by Rome in the third century BC. Because of its site on a high, steep bluff of tuff, a volcanic rock, the city ...
-
[99]
Building Materials of the ColosseumIn the below of the building, heavier materials such as tuff and lime were used, which was known as grading. Roman builders know and discovered different ...
-
[100]
Rapa Nui (Easter Island) Moai (article) - Khan AcademyThe moai were probably carved to commemorate important ancestors and were made from around 1000 C.E. until the second half of the seventeenth century. Over a ...
- [101]
-
[102]
Decay of Rhenish tuff in Dutch monuments. Part 1: Use, composition ...Aug 6, 2025 · Rhenish tuffs from the volcanic Eifel region, Germany, have widely been used as building stone in the Netherlands. Different kinds of tuff ...
-
[103]
Exchange networks from close-up: The case of Lipari obsidianSep 15, 2016 · A systematic study on obsidian tools in Calabria and Sicily carried out by the authors have revealed the uniqueness in the patterns of production, exchange and ...
-
[104]
Use of tuffs from central Turkey as admixture in pozzolanic cementsVolcanic tuffs, which are a variety of pyroclastic rocks, are commonly used in the cement industry as an admixture for the production of pozzolanic cements.
-
[105]
Hot mixing: Mechanistic insights into the durability of ancient Roman ...Jan 6, 2023 · This concrete was typically composed of volcanic tuff and other coarse aggregates (caementa), and bound by a mortar based on lime and pozzolanic ...
-
[106]
Properties of high strength tuff lightweight aggregate concreteThe properties obtained include unit weight, Poisson's ratio, static modulus of elasticity, specimen size and shape effect, and the development with age of ...
-
[107]
Volcanic tuff as a World Heritage Georesource, a Case Study of ...Oct 25, 2024 · The decomposed varieties were used as abrasive dust, stone dust, while the zeolitic varieties (hydrovolcanic tuff, Mikóháza, Rátka tuff) were ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[108]
Natural volcanic tuff as a soil mulching: effect on plant growth and ...Jun 11, 2019 · Natural tuff is extensively applied as soil amendment material in agriculture for improving the absorption and preservation of nutrients and ...
-
[109]
Key parameters of volcanic tuffs used as building stone: a statistical ...Dec 8, 2021 · Volcanic tuff is an extrusive igneous rock formed by the consolidation and lithification of volcanic products, which have been ejected by an ...
-
[110]
Chapter 5 Construction in regions with tuff depositsJan 1, 2006 · Within welded tuffs, there can be problems with quarrying large blocks or excavating underground structures because of the abundance of cooling ...
-
[111]
Petrology and Genesis of the Italian Zeolite Tuffs Used in the ... - MDPIOct 28, 2021 · The aim of this study is to compare the Italian zeolite tuffs used in the construction industry in terms of mineralogy, petrology and geochemistry
-
[112]
Mineralogy and geotechnical properties of alkaline-activated kaolin ...Apr 25, 2024 · This study investigated the mineralogy, microstructure, and geotechnical properties of the prepared mixtures. The aim was to produce a sustainable, ...<|separator|>
-
[113]
Pollution removal from leachate using bottom ash-bentonite-zeolite ...The lowest permeability was found to be provided by 30% ratio in bentonite. ... tuff mixtures for use as landfill liners. Geotech Geol Eng., 35 (2017), p ...
-
[114]
Evidence for a large-magnitude eruption from Campi Flegrei caldera ...Apr 25, 2019 · ... Tuff (M 6.8) eruption at Campi Flegrei. However, the lack of coarse, thick, traceable, near-vent deposit suggests peculiar eruption dynamics.
-
[115]
The Neapolitan Yellow Tuff caldera offshore the Campi FlegreiAug 1, 2014 · We present a seismic image of the Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT) caldera. · The ring fault system of the NYT caldera is identified in the Pozzuoli ...
-
[116]
Geological map showing the UNESCO Rhön Biosphere Reserve ...The average annual rainfall is between 1100 mm in the mountain areas, and, due to its location in the rain shadow of the mountains, as low as 500 mm in the ...
-
[117]
Geological map showing the UNESCO Rhön Biosphere Reserve ...Download scientific diagram | Geological map showing the UNESCO Rhön Biosphere Reserve (Bavaria, Germany) with the location of the springs studied.
-
[118]
Compositional zoning of the Otowi Member of the Bandelier Tuff ...Feb 23, 2024 · The Otowi Member of the Bandelier Tuff erupted at ca. 1.60 Ma from the Valles caldera (New Mexico, USA). It consists of as much as 400 km 3 (dense rock ...
-
[119]
The volcanic rocks of Easter Island (Chile) and their use for the Moai ...Nov 1, 2010 · They include tuffs deposited in water, subaerial welded scoriae, lava flows and lava domes, with compositions ranging from basalt to trachyte.
-
[120]
Post-collisional shift from polygenetic to monogenetic volcanism ...Volcanism in Syunik (S. Armenia) has transitioned from polygenetic to monogenetic. New 40 Ar/ 39 Ar ages constrain the timing of this transition to around 1 Ma.<|separator|>
-
[121]
[PDF] Structural and Geomorphological Evolution of Huangshan (Yellow ...Jul 1, 2002 · Huangshan (Yellow Mountain) is an 1864-m granite massif situated at 30 10 N and 11 8 11 E, south of the lower reaches of the Yangtze Rivm ...Missing: Tuff | Show results with:Tuff
-
[122]
Petrology and geochemistry of volcanic rocks of the Cerro Galan ...May 1, 2009 · At least 2000 km3 of relatively uniform dacitic magma have been erupted from the Cerro Galan caldera complex, northwest Argentina.
-
[123]
39 Ar age constraints on the evolution of the Cerro Galán ignimbritesSep 29, 2010 · This paper reexamines the geochemical framework in which the ignimbrite erupted based on new major and trace element whole rock, quartz δ 18 O analyses, single ...
-
[124]
Bandelier Geology - National Park ServiceAs the hot ash cooled, it welded into a rock called tuff. Bandelier is located on this broad, sloping layer of tuff called the Pajarito Plateau.
-
[125]
Syunik Province, Armenia - MindatAug 9, 2025 · Syunik is the southernmost province of Armenia. It is bordered by the Vayots Dzor Province to the north, Azerbaijan's Nakhchivan Autonomous ...
-
[126]
Tuff - Etymology, Origin & Meaning"light, porous rock," 1560s, from French tufe (16c.), from Italian tufa "porous rock" (see tufa, which is the Italian word taken later directly into English).
- [127]
-
[128]
PLINY THE ELDER, Natural History | Loeb Classical LibraryAs opposed to Nova Carthago (Cartagena) in Spain. Pliny limits tofus to soft tufas. The hard varieties are silex (§ 168). Thus reversing the usual practice.<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[129]
The peperino rocks: historical and volcanological overviewJun 21, 2022 · Ten years previously, the French naturalist Cordier (1815) had used the term Pépérite to identify tuffs. Originally, the term pépérite was thus ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[130]
2 Campi Phlegraei and the Neapolitan Pursuit of 'Most Remote ...Sir William Hamilton incorporates many classical references with the natural history of Vesuvius in his Campi Phlegraei, particularly in his extended ...
-
[131]
principles of geology. - Darwin Online... Vulcanists and Neptunists—Intemperance of the rival Sects.—Hutton's Theory ... tuff and volcanic ejected matter to the depth of twenty-five feet. The ...
-
[132]
Vulcanists & Neptunists | Cecil J. Schneer, Gavin de BeerThe neptunists did not deny the existence of volcanoes but argued that basalt was not a volcanic rock and that volcanoes were recent and modern features, rather ...Missing: tuff theories
-
[133]
[PDF] Volcanoes: Global Perspectives... tuff results where settling ash particles are so hot that they melt together ... Leopold von Buch (1774–1853). Although originally a staunch Neptunist ...
-
[134]
[PDF] Italian mountain geology - Internet ArchiveFeb 15, 2002 · Stoppani and De Stefani as sustaining, on geological grounds, the ... a double belt of volcanic, mostly tuff hills, which, from 300 m.<|separator|>
-
[135]
Ash-flow tuffs: Their origin, geologic relations, and identificationAsh-flow tuffs: Their origin, geologic relations, and identification. Professional Paper 366. By: Clarence S. Ross and Robert L. Smith ... 1961. Language, English.
-
[136]
Descriptive nomenclature and classification of pyroclastic deposits ...Descriptive nomenclature and classification of pyroclastic deposits and fragments: Recommendations of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks.Missing: committee | Show results with:committee
-
[137]
[PDF] geokniga-ash-flow-tuffs-their-origin-geologic-relations.pdfRoss and R. L. Smith (1961), and. 354-F, Zones and zonal variations in ash-flows, by R. L. Smith (1960). As these papers are now being re- published, perhaps ...