They erupt equally at day and at night.
There is no fixed length to an erruption, it varies from volcano to volcano. a volcano can erupt in days or more than its depend on its manner .
Yes. A volcano can erupt at any time of day or night. This does not affect a volcano.
No. Whether a volcano is going to erupt is not affected by whether it is day or night. Kilauea has produced the longest continuous eruption on record (31 years and counting), but many volcanoes have had activity that has continued day and night.
Active volcanoes can erupt anywhere from a few times a year to several years apart. The frequency and intensity of eruptions can vary significantly depending on the volcano's location and underlying geological factors. Monitoring systems are in place to constantly assess the activity of active volcanoes to help predict and prepare for potential eruptions.
Seasons are to do with weather and climate. A volcano may erupt anytime not in summer or winter, that is irrelevant. Volcanoes do not erupt in a season, the reason they erupt is due to the build up of magma in the Earth's crust below the place they erupt. Some volcanoes are: extinct, nothing happening for a very long time dormant, they have not erupted for a long time but might become active in 500-1000 years active, they 'dribble or spew' all the time new ones which erupt sometimes after other thermal activity becomes apparent sometimes unexpectedly but usually in an area where there are other volcanoes or thermal activity. An example is the Volcanic Plateau in New Zealand which is part of the Pacific Rim of Fire where many extinct, dormant and active volcanoes are situated.
Active volcanoes erupt. Dormant volcanoes are quiet - but may erupt again some day. Extinct volcanoes have "closed up shop" for good, and will never erupt again.
There is no fixed length to an erruption, it varies from volcano to volcano. a volcano can erupt in days or more than its depend on its manner .
Yes. A volcano can erupt at any time of day or night. This does not affect a volcano.
No. Whether a volcano is going to erupt is not affected by whether it is day or night. Kilauea has produced the longest continuous eruption on record (31 years and counting), but many volcanoes have had activity that has continued day and night.
Yes it does. Day or night doesn't make any difference to "mother nature."
Active volcanoes can erupt anywhere from a few times a year to several years apart. The frequency and intensity of eruptions can vary significantly depending on the volcano's location and underlying geological factors. Monitoring systems are in place to constantly assess the activity of active volcanoes to help predict and prepare for potential eruptions.
Seasons are to do with weather and climate. A volcano may erupt anytime not in summer or winter, that is irrelevant. Volcanoes do not erupt in a season, the reason they erupt is due to the build up of magma in the Earth's crust below the place they erupt. Some volcanoes are: extinct, nothing happening for a very long time dormant, they have not erupted for a long time but might become active in 500-1000 years active, they 'dribble or spew' all the time new ones which erupt sometimes after other thermal activity becomes apparent sometimes unexpectedly but usually in an area where there are other volcanoes or thermal activity. An example is the Volcanic Plateau in New Zealand which is part of the Pacific Rim of Fire where many extinct, dormant and active volcanoes are situated.
We will, we will, rock you down, pick you up like a volcano we erupt. we are the (Cowboys) here to say, we will rock you night and day!
day
yes it is night active.
Volcanoes erupt all over the world every day. The eruptions might not be as big as Vesuvius or Mount St. Helen's, but they still do erupt a lot. Mount Kilauea in Hawaii is in a constant state of eruption, with 'rivers' of lava flowing into the ocean. It's pretty dope.
do you use more electricity at night than day