Geologists and vulcanologists.
They are not studied as much because they are less dangerous than magmatic volcanoes because there has been hardly any deaths from mud volcanoes.
It depends on the type of hazard. Volcanoes are studied by volcanologists, who are a variety of geologist, while tornadoes are studied by meteorologists (weather scientists). Most natural hazards are of a meterological or geological nature, and so will be studied by meteorolgists or geologists.
their is special scienists who study the. they have sepicla tools to help them.
Volcanoes are being studied in various locations around the world, including countries with active volcanic activity such as Japan, Italy, Iceland, Indonesia, and the United States. Many research institutions and universities have ongoing studies on volcanoes to better understand their behavior, potential hazards, and early warning signs of eruptions.
A person who has studied physics is called a physicist.
Alfred Wegener studied volcanoes. He was a German scientist who proposed the idea of the continental drift.
A person who studies volcanoes is called a volcanologist. They specialize in understanding the behavior, formation, and impact of volcanoes on the Earth's surface.
A person who works with volcanoes is called a volcanologist. They study the behavior, formation, and eruption of volcanoes to better understand and predict volcanic activity.
A person who studies volcanoes is called a volcanologist. They analyze volcanic activity, study eruption patterns, and work to predict volcanic events to help protect communities living near volcanoes.
The study of volcanoes: volcanology is important because volcanic eruptions can cause immense damage to the surrounding area: when Mount Saint Helens erupted in 1980 65 people died in the ensuing mud slides. Volcanoes are studied by examining the magna (hot molten rock, lava is erupted magma) in the volcano which is located in the crater, most volcanoes don't even have craters. Mostly volcanoes are studied by monitoring their state and trying to correlate changes that can be used a as a predictor for an eruption.
vocanologist
Scientists explore volcanoes in order to study its past eruption and/or when it will possibly erupt again. If the volcano is inactive they examine the old rocks around it in order to know the history of that volcano. There are both active and inactive volcanoes both of which are studied by scientists.