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📖 Lesson 23 ⏱ ~30 min Year 8 · Unit 3 ⚡ +85 XP

Volcanoes

Hawaii's Kilauea has been erupting almost continuously since 1983, building new land as lava flows into the sea. Vesuvius buried Pompeii in seconds. Same planet, completely different volcanoes. In this lesson you'll discover what drives volcanic eruptions, why some are gentle and others explosive, and why Australia has extinct volcanoes despite having no active ones today.

Today's hook: Around 5,000 years ago, a volcano near Mount Eccles in western Victoria erupted, spreading lava across 23 km of landscape. Geoscience Australia records show this is one of Australia's youngest eruptions. Indigenous Australians were living here at the time and almost certainly witnessed it. Why is this continent, sitting in the middle of a tectonic plate, still capable of volcanic activity?
0/5QUESTS
Warm-up
Think First
+5 XP each

Q1 · Australia has no active volcanoes today. But we have extinct ones. Does that mean Australia never had volcanic activity? When might it have been active?

Q2 · Two volcanoes: one erupts gently with slow-flowing lava; another explodes violently. What determines how violently a volcano erupts?

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Learning objectives
What you'll master
3 areas

● Know

  • The three settings where volcanoes form (divergent, subduction, hotspot)
  • The three main types of volcanoes and their characteristics
  • Australia's volcanic history and the Newer Volcanics Province

● Understand

  • Why silica content determines eruption style
  • How the Hawaiian hotspot chain formed
  • The benefits and hazards of volcanic activity

● Can do

  • Compare shield and composite volcanoes in terms of shape, lava, and eruption
  • Explain why Australia has no active volcanoes today
  • Identify volcanic landforms in Australia
Cross-lesson links: Volcanoes are driven by the same plate tectonics from Lesson 2, and the lava they produce eventually becomes igneous rock, one piece of the rock cycle in Lesson 5. Volcanic gases also feed into the atmosphere you'll study in Lesson 9.
Match each volcano term to its correct description.
  • Volcano
  • Magma
  • Lava
  • Shield volcano
  • Composite volcano
  • Molten rock above Earth's surface
  • An opening in Earth's crust through which magma reaches the surface
  • Tall, steep-sided; built from alternating ash and lava; explosive eruptions
  • Molten rock below Earth's surface
  • Broad, low profile; gentle eruptions of runny basaltic lava
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Vocabulary · tap to flip
Words You Need
5 terms
Core term Concept Skill Reference
Volcano
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Volcano
An opening in Earth's crust where magma, gases, and ash can escape. The cone-shaped structure built up around this opening.
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Magma
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Magma
Molten rock below Earth's surface. When it reaches the surface it is called lava.
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Lava
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Lava
Molten rock (magma) that has reached Earth's surface. It flows from vents and hardens to form volcanic rock.
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Shield volcano
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Shield volcano
A broad, low volcano built from many flows of low-viscosity basaltic lava. Gentle, effusive eruptions. Example: Mauna Loa, Hawaii.
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Composite volcano
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Composite volcano
Also called stratovolcano. Tall, steep-sided, built from alternating ash and lava. High-silica viscous magma causes explosive eruptions. Example: Mt Fuji, Japan.
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Which volcano type has the broadest, flattest shape?
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Where and why volcanoes form
Volcano Formation Settings
+5 XP

Hawaii's Kilauea volcano has been erupting almost continuously since 1983. Lava flows slowly into the ocean, building new land. Now picture Vesuvius burying Pompeii in seconds. Same planet, completely different volcanoes. What's different? The silica content of their magma.

Magma = molten rock underground. Lava = molten rock above ground. Volcanoes form where magma finds a path to the surface. Three settings:

  1. Divergent boundaries: Plates pull apart; basaltic magma (low silica, runny) rises to fill the gap. Gentle eruptions. Forms mid-ocean ridges and rift valleys. Most volcanic activity on Earth happens here, mostly underwater.
  2. Subduction zones (convergent): Dense oceanic plate sinks into the mantle. Water trapped in the oceanic rock lowers the melting point of the mantle above. Silica-rich magma rises through continental crust. High viscosity → explosive eruptions. Forms volcanic arcs (e.g. the Pacific Ring of Fire).
  3. Hotspots: Plumes of exceptionally hot mantle punching through a plate anywhere, including in the middle of plates. Examples: Hawaii, Yellowstone (USA). The plate moves over the fixed hotspot, creating a chain of volcanoes.
Shield Volcano (broad, low, gentle) runny lava → magma chamber Composite Volcano (steep, explosive, ash) magma chamber
What to write in your book
The Hawaiian Islands were formed by:
Three types compared
Shield, Composite, and Cinder Cone
+5 XP
TypeShapeLava typeEruption styleExample
ShieldBroad, low, dome-shaped (like an upside-down shield)Low-silica basaltic; runny (low viscosity)Gentle, effusive, lava flows freelyMauna Loa, Hawaii
Composite / StratovolcanoTall, steep-sided, symmetrical coneHigh-silica; thick, viscousViolent, explosive, gas trapped, builds pressureMt Fuji (Japan), Krakatoa, Ruapehu (NZ)
Cinder coneSmall, steep, bowl-shaped craterBasaltic pyroclasts (loose rock fragments)Moderate; short-lived; single eruption eventTower Hill, Victoria; many in Newer Volcanics Province

Caldera: a large crater left when a magma chamber empties and the summit collapses. Example: Crater Lake, Oregon (USA).

The key difference between shield and composite: silica content. High silica → viscous magma → gas can't escape → pressure builds → explosion. Low silica → runny magma → gas escapes easily → gentle flow.

What makes composite (strato) volcanoes erupt more explosively than shield volcanoes?
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Australia's volcanic past and benefits
Australian Volcanic History
+5 XP

Australia has no currently active volcanoes, but has extensive evidence of past activity:

  • Newer Volcanics Province (Victoria and South Australia): the most recently active volcanic field in Australia. Last erupted approximately 5,000 years ago (Mt Gambier, SA; Mt Eccles, Vic). More than 400 volcanic centres including Tower Hill, Mt Napier, Mt Schank.
  • Atherton Tableland (Queensland): volcanic plateau with fertile basaltic soils.
  • Hotspot chain: as the Indo-Australian Plate moved north over a hotspot, it left a trail of progressively older, more eroded extinct volcanoes to the north.

Benefits of volcanoes:

  • Volcanic soil is extremely fertile, rich in minerals. Australia's best wine regions (Hunter Valley, Barossa) and coffee-growing areas in QLD sit on volcanic soils.
  • Volcanoes create new land (Hawaii) and contribute to Earth's long-term carbon cycle.

Hazards: lava flows, ash fall (disrupts aviation and agriculture), pyroclastic flows (fastest and most deadly, superheated gas and rock), lahars (volcanic mudflows).

Volcanic soil is often very fertile because:
Predict then reveal+8 XP
1 · Predict
2 · Reveal
3 · Compare

Two volcanoes: Volcano A has magma with very high silica content. Volcano B has magma with low silica content. Predict: which volcano is more likely to erupt explosively, and why? What role does silica content play in eruption style?

50%
A1
Activity 1 · Volcano type comparison
Comparing Volcano Types
+10 XP

In your workbook, complete this comparison table for the three main volcano types:

Columns: Volcano type | Shape | Lava viscosity | Eruption style | Example volcano | Where it forms

Fill in all rows for shield, composite, and cinder cone volcanoes.

A2
Activity 2 · Australian volcanoes
Australia's Volcanic Story
+10 XP

Answer these questions about Australian volcanic history:

  1. Where is the Newer Volcanics Province, and when did it last erupt?
  2. Why does Australia have a chain of extinct volcanoes getting older from south to north?
  3. Give one benefit of past volcanic activity for Australian farming.
  4. Should Australians be concerned about future volcanic eruptions? Explain your reasoning.
Reflect
Revisit your thinking
reflect

At the start of the lesson, you read that the last volcano in Victoria erupted around 5,000 years ago, and that Indigenous Australians likely stood witness to it.

Now that you've studied how volcanoes work, imagine you were there. Would it have been a gentle lava flow or a violent explosion? Use what you know about silica and viscosity to explain your answer.

Interactive Tool, Volcano Types Explorer Open fullscreen ↗
After using the Volcano Types Explorer, which volcano shape did you find was built by quiet eruptions of thin, runny lava?
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Quick check
Shield volcanoes have low-viscosity lava. This means their eruptions are:
+10 XP
2
Quick check
What makes composite/stratovolcanoes erupt more explosively than shield volcanoes?
+10 XP
3
Quick check
The Hawaiian Islands were formed by:
+10 XP
4
Quick check
Which region of Australia has the most recently active volcanic history?
+10 XP
5
Quick check
Volcanic soil is often very fertile because:
+10 XP
Short answer · explain in your own words
Show your reasoning
3 questions
Recall Core 4 marks

Q1. Describe two different settings where volcanoes form and explain why magma reaches the surface in each. (4 marks)

Apply Core 4 marks

Q2. Compare shield volcanoes and composite (strato) volcanoes in terms of shape, lava type, and eruption style. (4 marks)

Evaluate Core 3 marks

Q3. Explain why Australia has no currently active volcanoes, yet has evidence of past volcanic activity. (3 marks)

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From the lesson
Answers

Answers

MCQ 1

B Low-viscosity (runny) lava flows freely and allows dissolved gases to escape easily, producing gentle effusive eruptions rather than explosive ones.

MCQ 2

B High silica content makes magma viscous (thick and sticky). Viscous magma traps dissolved gases. As the magma rises and pressure drops, the gas can't escape gradually, pressure builds until it ruptures explosively.

MCQ 3

B The Hawaiian Islands formed as the Pacific Plate moved over a fixed hotspot in the mantle. The chain of islands gets progressively older from south-east (Big Island, youngest, Kilauea still active) to north-west (oldest, most eroded).

MCQ 4

D The Newer Volcanics Province in Victoria and South Australia contains more than 400 volcanic centres. It last erupted approximately 5,000 years ago, well within human history and likely witnessed by Indigenous Australians.

MCQ 5

B Volcanic rock (basalt, etc.) is rich in minerals like potassium, calcium, iron and magnesium. When volcanic rock weathers into soil over thousands of years, those minerals become available to plants, making volcanic soils extremely productive for agriculture.

Short Answer 1

Model answer: Setting 1, Subduction zones: where a dense oceanic plate sinks beneath a continental plate, water in the oceanic rock lowers the melting point of surrounding mantle rock. This melts to form silica-rich magma that is less dense than surrounding rock and rises through the continental crust to the surface. Setting 2, Hotspots: a fixed plume of unusually hot mantle material melts through the plate above it, regardless of plate boundary location. Magma rises to the surface through the plate, forming a volcano. As the plate moves, a chain of extinct volcanoes is left behind.

Short Answer 2

Model answer: Shield volcanoes are broad and flat (like an upside-down shield), built from many layers of low-viscosity (runny) basaltic lava. Their eruptions are gentle and effusive, lava flows freely. Example: Mauna Loa, Hawaii. Composite (stratovolcanoes) are tall, steep-sided cones built from alternating layers of ash and lava. Their magma is high in silica, making it viscous, this traps gas under pressure, causing violent explosive eruptions. Example: Mt Fuji, Japan.

Short Answer 3

Model answer: Australia has no currently active volcanoes because it sits in the stable interior of the Indo-Australian Plate, far from active plate boundaries where most volcanic activity occurs. The plate has moved northward over millions of years, moving away from the hotspot that previously fuelled volcanic activity. However, Australia has extensive evidence of past volcanic activity: the Newer Volcanics Province in Victoria and South Australia erupted as recently as ~5,000 years ago, and older extinct volcanic fields are found across Queensland and elsewhere, formed as the plate passed over various hotspots.

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