The eruption, by some estimates, produced about 140 million cubic meters or ash.
No. Fly ash is ash left over from burning coal. Pumice is a porous rock produce during some volcanic eruptions.
disruption of business without physical damage
Eyjafjallajokull erupted twice, from december, 2009
iceland
The eruption, by some estimates, produced about 140 million cubic meters or ash.
Eyjafjallajokull is a volcano that recently spewed out ash, particles, and lava. The volcano is on Iceland.
Because of the ash
Volcanoes with high levels of water in their lava produce ash, those with dry lava produce no ash.
London airports are closed on Saturday April 17 due to atmospheric ash (from the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull)
Eyjafjallajokull is located in Iceland.
Boiling hot magma spurts out of the top and flows down the volcano's side, sometimes producing an ash cloud, like Eyjafjallajokull, Iceland in 2010.
yes
Volcanoes vary in their production of ash, but all of them while erupted produce huge ash clouds, often bigger than themselves! In fact, the volcanic eruption in Pompeii had so much ash, that it preserved the bodies and one can still go see them today.
Eyjafjallajokull is in Iceland near the southern coast.
No, they produce very explosive eruptions. They do not erupt much magma, instead exuding chunks of ash and semi-hardened igneous rock.
The eruptions would normally be passive in nature, however when the magma mixes with the glaciers present on the volcano it gets more explosive. The volcano is of the same style as Hawaiian volcanoes, however, with the presence of ice the eruptions tend to produce large amounts of steam and ash that can cause explosive outbursts.