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Radon, A Rare Element

To the best of our knowledge, the entire universe is constructed from just over a hundred different types of building blocks called atoms. Each has its own characteristic properties, and while there are dangers associated with each and every one of them, it seems that the rarer the element, the more serious are its effects. Such is the case with ...

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RadonARareElement
Physics

Delivered by TIR

The content of this article has been delivered to you via internet fiber-optic links. Today most phone conversations, fax transmissions and almost all internet and email traffic travel at the speed of ... Continue reading

TIR
Geology

Bryce Canyon

Bryce Canyon is a small national park in southwestern Utah. Named after the Mormon Pioneer Ebenezer Bryce, Bryce Canyon became a national park in 1924. ... Continue reading

BryceCanyon
Astronomy

It's a Supernova

Scientists have discovered that one of the brightest gamma ray bursts on record is also a supernova. It's the first direct evidence linking these two types of explosions, both triggered by the death ... Continue reading

ItsaSupernova
Physics

The World's Largest Laser

In a rural community in Northern California, in a building spanning the length of two football fields scientists are creating the world's largest laser. The National Ignition Facility project, know as ... Continue reading

LargestLaser

Types of Volcanoes

TypesofVolcanoesGeologists describe four types of volcanoes. Cinder cones, the simplest of volcanoes, grow as pieces of congealed lava rise from a central vent and form a funnel-shaped crater. Lava domes arise from lava too viscous to flow far or fast. The dome accumulates atop a central vent and expands from the inside. Shield volcanoes grow as fluid lava spreads outward from one or more vents. These volcanoes form broad, gently sloping domes shaped like a warrior's shield. Composite or stratovolcanoes are steep-sided and symmetrical. Built of alternating layers of lava, ash, cinders, and rocks, they grow as magma rises from a chamber deep inside the Earth's crust.

The famous Soufriere Hills volcano on the West Indies island of Montserrat is a stratovolcano. Its 1995 rebirth after a 400-year dormancy was phreatic, meaning 'steam blast.' When cold ground or surface water comes in contact with hot magma, expanding water vapor blows fragments of solid rock out of the magma channel, dispelling ash and gases into the atmosphere. Today, the Montserrat volcano grows through pyroclastic flows. These clouds of ash, rock, and super-hot gases tumble down the mountain at speeds that can exceed 100 kilometers (60 miles) per hour.

High pressure beneath the Earth's crust keeps gases dissolved in magma, but reduced pressure at the surface allows them to expand and escape. Eruption gases are 75 to 90 percent water vapor. Carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and traces of nitrogen, carbon monoxide, sulfur, argon, chlorine, and fluorine make up the rest. Sulfur dioxide endangers health and damages the environment. In the atmosphere, it combines with water forming sulfuric acid rain.