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The influences of planetary environments on the eruption styles of volcanoes

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The influences of planetary environments on the eruption styles of volcanoes. / Wilson, Lionel.
In: Vistas in Astronomy, Vol. 27, No. PART 4, 01.01.1984, p. 333-360.

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Wilson L. The influences of planetary environments on the eruption styles of volcanoes. Vistas in Astronomy. 1984 Jan 1;27(PART 4):333-360. doi: 10.1016/0083-6656(84)90016-3

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Wilson, Lionel. / The influences of planetary environments on the eruption styles of volcanoes. In: Vistas in Astronomy. 1984 ; Vol. 27, No. PART 4. pp. 333-360.

Bibtex

@article{220a3ded835e47779bd087b544a40f4b,
title = "The influences of planetary environments on the eruption styles of volcanoes",
abstract = "Volcanism appears to have been a major process in the formation of surface materials on each of the silicate-dominated planets and satellites in the solar system at some stage in its development. Observations of the types and extents (in space and time) of volcanic activity on a planetary body can provide important information on the interior structure and chemistry, and on the near-surface environmental conditions. Attempts to develop deterministic models of volcanic mechanisms which are sufficiently general to be applicable to eruptions of a given kind on any planet have been a major spur to understanding the geological processes involved. We are currently able to give fairly complete descriptions of some eruption processes, in the forms in which they have operated on several planets.",
author = "Lionel Wilson",
year = "1984",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/0083-6656(84)90016-3",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "333--360",
journal = "Vistas in Astronomy",
issn = "0083-6656",
publisher = "Pergamon Press Ltd.",
number = "PART 4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The influences of planetary environments on the eruption styles of volcanoes

AU - Wilson, Lionel

PY - 1984/1/1

Y1 - 1984/1/1

N2 - Volcanism appears to have been a major process in the formation of surface materials on each of the silicate-dominated planets and satellites in the solar system at some stage in its development. Observations of the types and extents (in space and time) of volcanic activity on a planetary body can provide important information on the interior structure and chemistry, and on the near-surface environmental conditions. Attempts to develop deterministic models of volcanic mechanisms which are sufficiently general to be applicable to eruptions of a given kind on any planet have been a major spur to understanding the geological processes involved. We are currently able to give fairly complete descriptions of some eruption processes, in the forms in which they have operated on several planets.

AB - Volcanism appears to have been a major process in the formation of surface materials on each of the silicate-dominated planets and satellites in the solar system at some stage in its development. Observations of the types and extents (in space and time) of volcanic activity on a planetary body can provide important information on the interior structure and chemistry, and on the near-surface environmental conditions. Attempts to develop deterministic models of volcanic mechanisms which are sufficiently general to be applicable to eruptions of a given kind on any planet have been a major spur to understanding the geological processes involved. We are currently able to give fairly complete descriptions of some eruption processes, in the forms in which they have operated on several planets.

U2 - 10.1016/0083-6656(84)90016-3

DO - 10.1016/0083-6656(84)90016-3

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0011465717

VL - 27

SP - 333

EP - 360

JO - Vistas in Astronomy

JF - Vistas in Astronomy

SN - 0083-6656

IS - PART 4

ER -