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Volcanology

Reviews of Geophysics, 1987
In the quadrennium 1983–1986 there has been an exceptional increase in studies concerning volcanoes. It has also been an active four years for the world's volcanoes, including some of the most devastating events known and major alerts at three of the world's calderas.
Stephen Self, Peter W. Francis
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Volcanology

Reviews of Geophysics, 1979
Volcanology in the 1970s has expanded greatly in both size and scope. Comparison of the references listed here with those of the U.S. National Report to IUGG for 1963–6 (by R. W. Decker) and 1967–70 (by T. L. Wright)* illustrates many of these changes.
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Volcanology

Reviews of Geophysics, 1983
Volcanoes erupt and are constructed of materials that were subjected to complex physical and chemical processes during ascent and emplacement on the earth's surface. To understand these processes is the most fundamental reason for studying volcanoes. We take a broad approach in this review, which concentrates on American efforts in volcanology during ...
D. A. Swanson, T. J. Casadevall
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Databases in Volcanology

Bulletin of Volcanology, 2022
The varied and episodic nature of volcanic eruptions requires numerous and diverse observations for study and successful forecasting. Volcanological databases are important resources for the community because they enable investigation of questions that are not answerable by single datasets.
Andrews, B. J.   +3 more
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Volcanology Via Satellite

Monthly Weather Review, 1978
Abstract A recent eruption of Kilauea Volcano on the island of Hawaii is examined via photographs from both geostationary and polar orbiting satellites. The meteorological effects of the volcanic effluent cloud on the state of Hawaii and adjacent Pacific regions are described.
Donald R. Cochran, Robert L. Pyle
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Basement volcanology

Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 1942
The maps of the Sierra Nevada Region have gained enough detail to individualize steep granite‐structures, some of which must have channelled heat to the surface. MAYO, who mapped 4,000 square miles, 1930–1940, in the High Sierras, found many such structures in the forms of hooks or whorls, the outcrops of steep drag‐folds, successive in time and place.
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