Fissure vent

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A volcanic fissure and lava channel.
A volcanic fissure and lava channel.
Lava Channel at Big Island of Hawaii
Lava Channel at Big Island of Hawaii

A fissure vent, also known as a volcanic fissure or simply fissure, is a linear volcanic vent through which lava erupts, usually without any explosive activity. The vent is usually a few meters wide and may be many kilometers long. Fissure vents can cause large flood basalts and lava channels. This type of volcano is usually hard to recognize from the ground and from space because it has no central caldera and the surface is mostly flat. The volcano can usually be seen as a crack in the ground or on the ocean floor. Narrow fissures can be filled in with lava that hardens. As erosion removes its surroundings, the lava mass could stand above the surface as a dyke. The dykes that feed fissures reach the suface from depths of a few kilometers. Fissures are usually found in or along rifts and rift zones, such as Iceland and the Great Rift Valley in Africa.

In Iceland, volcanic vents are often long fissures parallel to the rift zone where lithospheric plates are diverging. Renewed eruptions generally occur from new parallel fractures offset by a few hundred to thousands of metres from the earlier fissures. This distribution of vents and voluminous eruptions of fluid basaltic lava usually build up a thick lava plateau rather than a single volcanic edifice. The Laki fissure system produced the biggest eruption on earth in historical times, in the form of a flood basalt, during the Eldgjá eruption A.D. 934, which released 19.6 km³ (4.7 mi³) of lava.

The radial fissure vents of Hawaiian volcanoes produce “curtains of fire” as lava fountains erupt along a portion of a fissure. These vents produce low ramparts of basaltic spatter on both sides of the fissure. More isolated lava fountains along the fissure produce crater rows of small spatter and cinder cones. The fragments that form a spatter cone are hot and plastic enough to weld together, while the fragments that form a cinder cone remain separate because of their lower temperature.

Name Elevation Location Last eruption
metres feet Coordinates
Laki 1725 5659 64.42° N 17.33° W 1783
Lanzarote 670 2198 29.03° N 13.63° W 1824
Cordon Caulle 1798 5899 40.46° S 72.25° W 1960
São Jorge Island 1053 3455 38.65° N 28.08° W 1907
Vatnafjöll 1235 4052 63.92° N 19.67° W 1200 BP
Quetena 5730 18799 22.25° S 67.42° W Unknown
Nejapa Miraflores 360 1181 12.12° N 86.32° W Unknown
Manda-Inakir 600+ 1968 12.38° N 42.20° E 1928
Hertali 900? 2953 9.78° N 40.33° E Unknown
Gran Canaria 1950 6350 28.00° N 15.58° W less than 1000 BP
Fuerteventura 529 1736 28.358° N 14.02° W Unknown
Estelí 899 2949 13.17° N 86.40° W Unknown
Butajiri Silti Field 2281 7484 8.05° N 83.85° E Unknown
Bishoftu Volcanic Field 1850+ 6069 8.78° N 38.98° E Unknown
Alu 429 1407 13.82° N 40.55° E Unknown
Singu Plateau 507 1663 22.70° N 95.98° E Unknown
Ray Mountain 2050 - 52.23° N 120.12° W Pleistocene

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