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Volcanology

Volcanology is the scientific study of volcanoes, magma, and volcanic processes. It seeks to understand how volcanoes form, how eruptions originate and evolve, and how eruption products interact with the atmosphere, climate, and landscapes. The field covers magma genesis and differentiation, degassing, eruption styles, and the transport and deposition of volcanic materials across diverse tectonic settings, from subduction zones to hotspots.

Methods combine field work, laboratory analyses, and modeling. Techniques include petrography and geochemistry, seismic monitoring, ground

Hazards and applications are central to volcanology. Monitoring provides early warnings to protect lives and aviation,

Historically, volcanology emerged as a distinct science in the 18th–19th centuries, with advances in petrology, volcanology,

deformation
measurements
(GPS
and
InSAR),
and
gas
flux
measurements.
Remote
sensing
from
satellites
tracks
ash
plumes
and
lava
activity.
Numerical
models
simulate
magma
storage,
ascent,
eruption
dynamics,
and
ash
dispersion.
inform
land-use
planning,
and
support
emergency
response.
Major
hazards
include
ash
clouds,
lava
flows,
pyroclastic
flows,
lahars,
and
volcanic
gases.
Research
also
contributes
to
climate
studies
by
examining
volcanic
aerosols
and
their
atmospheric
impacts.
and
geophysics.
Today
it
is
highly
interdisciplinary,
encompassing
geophysics,
geochemistry,
geodesy,
and
disaster
management.
Key
organizations
include
the
International
Association
of
Volcanology
and
Chemistry
of
the
Earth’s
Interior
(IAVCEI)
and
national
volcano
observatories
that
coordinate
monitoring
and
research.