pillow lava
pahoehoe
Kilauea volcano typically produces tholeiitic basalt magma, which is low in silica content and flows easily. This type of magma is associated with shield volcanoes like Kilauea, known for their gentle eruptions and copious lava flows.
Kilauea is a classic shield style volcano, this means that it generally erupts with large lava flows. This occurs because the magma type associated with Kilauea is basalt, the most fluid of any type of volcano. This fluid type of magma also makes it so that gasses do not readily trap in the magma chamber to explosive levels. ALthough this volcano has histories of past explosions they are rare and almost always driven by interactions of magma with water versus being gas driven.
Kilauea is a shield volcano fed by gas-poor basaltic magma. It is the gas in the magma that makes eruptions explosive. Kilauea has occasionally produced explosive eruptions when magma cam in contact with water.
Mount Kilauea is located at a divergent boundary, specifically at the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate. It is part of the Hawaiian hotspot, where magma rises from the mantle to create volcanic activity. This type of boundary is characterized by tectonic plates moving apart, allowing magma to reach the surface and form shield volcanoes like Kilauea.
Three Million gallons of magma
"According to the U.S. Geological Society, the Kilaueavolcano erupted approximately 63 times between 1750 and 1982 and has been continuously erupting since January 3, 1983. The Kilauea volcano is one of the most active in the world and has been responsible for the destruction of over 200 homes."
That depends on the forc of the eruption and the viscosity of the magma.
heat and pressure pushed magma out of the side vents making it ooze out and also magma shoots out of the crater.
Mauna Kilauea is a shield volcano
No, the eruption of Kilauea in Hawaii is not associated with subduction boundary. Kilauea is a shield volcano located on a hotspot, where magma rises from the mantle, creating volcanic eruptions.
Kilauea produces a type of igneous rock called basalt.