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Volcanoes as Tectonic Hazards
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About the lecture
In this lecture, the focus is on beginning to understand volcanoes in relation to their tectonic setting and how it influences their behaviour. To begin, we take a look at the Earth’s tectonic plates, with varying boundaries and how they play a crucial role in determining the nature of volcanoes found at those plate boundaries. We take a look at the structure of volcanism at subduction and divergent zones, and how their structure influences the characteristics of a volcano.
About the lecturer
Professor Matthew Watson is a Professor of Volcanoes and Climate in the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol. His research involves inversion of remotely-sensed data to retrieve physical parameters of volcanic plumes and clouds over several spatial scales, using both ground- and satellite-based techniques. These include ultraviolet (DOAS) and thermal infrared (ASTER) gas spectroscopy, and visible, near infrared (Sun-photometers) and thermal infrared aerosol retrievals (MODIS, AIRS).
Cite this Lecture
APA style
Watson, M. (2024, January 16). 1.1 Section A: The Challenge of Natural Hazards - Volcanoes as Tectonic Hazards [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/1-1-section-a-the-challenge-of-natural-hazards?auth=0&lesson=16214&option=12071&type=lesson
MLA style
Watson, M. "1.1 Section A: The Challenge of Natural Hazards – Volcanoes as Tectonic Hazards." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 16 Jan 2024, https://massolit.io/options/1-1-section-a-the-challenge-of-natural-hazards?auth=0&lesson=16214&option=12071&type=lesson