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Tuff

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Welded tuff from Bandelier National Monument,New Mexico.

Tuff (fromItaliantufo) is a type ofrock produced by the eruption ofvolcanoes.

It consists of consolidated[1]volcanic ash ejected from vents during a volcanic eruption. Rock with more than 50% tuff is calledtuffaceous. The chemical and mineral composition of tuff varies according to what was in the moltenmagma.

Volcanic ash

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In avolcanic eruption,Magma is blown apart by volcanic gases and steam. The products are volcanic gases,lava,steam, andtephra (fragments). The solid material produced and thrown into the air is calledtephra, regardless of composition or fragment size. If the pieces of ejecta are small, the material is calledvolcanic ash, defined as such particles less than 2 mm indiameter,sand-sized or smaller. These particles are small,slaggy pieces of magma and rock that have been tossed into the air by outbursts ofsteam and other gases.

Structure

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Breccias

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18.5 million-year-old tuff exposed at Hole in the Wall, Mojave National Preserve,California.
10 by 15 cm sample of tuff containing angular fragments of other rocks (Germany)
Agglomerate

Among the loose beds of ash that cover the slopes of manyvolcanoes, three classes of materials are represented.

  1. True ashes of the kind described above.
  2. Lumps of the old lavas and tuffs forming the walls of the crater, which have been torn away by the violent outbursts of steam.
  3. Pieces ofsedimentary rocks from the deeper parts of the volcano that were dislodged by the rising lava and are often baked and recrystallized by the heat.

In some great volcanic explosions nothing but materials of the second kind were emitted, as atMount Bandai inJapan in 1888. There have also been many eruptions in which the quantity of broken sedimentary rocks that mingled with the ash is very great.

These materials, in contrast to true ashes, tend to occur inangular fragments. When they form a large part of the mass the rock is more properly a 'volcanicbreccia' than a tuff. A breccia is a rock with sharp-edged fragments in it.

Agglomerate

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The ashes vary in size from large blocks twenty feet or more in diameter to the minutest impalpable dust. The large masses are called 'volcanic bombs'; they have mostly a rounded, elliptical or pear-shaped form owing to rotation in the air before they solidified. Many of them have ribbed or nodular surfaces, and sometimes they have a crust intersected by many cracks like the surface of a loaf of bread. Any ash in which they are very abundant is called anagglomerate.

Consolidation

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A tuff of recent origin is generally loose, but the older tuffs have usually beencemented together by pressure and the action of infiltrating water. This makes rocks which, while not very hard, are strong enough to be used for building purposes (e.g. in the neighborhood ofRome).

Under water

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Many volcanoes stand near the sea, and the ashes cast out by them are mingled with thesediments that are gathering at the bottom of the waters. In this way ashymuds orsands or even in some cases ashylimestones are formed. As a matter of fact most of the tuffs found in the older rock formations contain mixtures ofclay, sand, and sometimesfossilshells, which prove that they were beds spread out under water.

Repeated eruptions

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During some volcanic eruptions a layer of ashes several feet in thickness is deposited over a considerable district, but such beds thin out rapidly as the distance from the crater increases, and ash deposits covering many square miles are usually very thin.

The showers of ashes often follow one another after longer or shorter intervals, and hence thick masses of tuff, whether of subaerial or of marine origin, have mostly astratified character. In the fine beds it is often developed in great perfection.

Welded tuff

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Welded tuff at Golden Gate inYellowstone National Park

Welded tuff is apyroclastic flow oflava which was hot enough to weld together. During welding, the glass shards andpumice fragments adhere together (necking at point contacts), deform, and compact together.

A hotlava flow welded by heat can be highly voluminous, such as the Lava Creek Tuff erupted fromYellowstone Caldera inWyoming 640,000 years ago. Lava Creek Tuff was at least 1000 times as large as the deposits of the May 18, 1980 eruption ofMount St. Helens. It had aVolcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) of 8—greater than any eruption known in the last 10,000 years.

Basaltic tuffs

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Most of themoais inEaster Island are carved out oftholeiite basalt tuff

Basaltic tuffs are occur widely. They are found inSkye,Mull,Antrim and other places, where there aretertiary volcanic rocks; inScotland,Derbyshire andIreland among thecarboniferous strata; and among the still older rocks of theLake District, southern uplands of Scotland and Wales.

Basaltic tuffs are black, dark green or red in colour. They vary greatly in coarseness. Often submarine, they may containshale,sandstone,grit and other sedimentary material, and are occasionallyfossiliferous. Recent basaltic tuffs are found inIceland, theFaroe Islands,Jan Mayen, Sicily,Sandwich Islands,Samoa, etc.

Notes

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  1. By 'consolidated' is meant: the volcanic ash has been turned into a rock over time, by various geological processes.
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