Part of a series of articles titled Volcanic Eruption Types.
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Violently-explosive eruptions driven by steam explosions produced by the interaction of hot magma with surface water or shallow groundwater. Hydrovolcanic eruptions include tephra derived from juvenile magma.
These eruptions produce tephra and steam.
Hydrovolcanic eruptions build tuff rings and maars such as Ubehebe Craters, a group of maars in Death Valley National Park, and the Espenberg maars in Bering Land Bridge National Preserve.
They have also occurred in the summit of Kilauea in Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park, most recently in the May 1924 explosive eruption when the lava level in Halema’uma’u (the summit crater) dropped allowing interaction between magma and groundwater.
Bering Land Bridge National Preserve (BELA), Alaska—[BELA Geodiversity Atlas] [BELA Park Home] [BELA npshistory.com]
Death Valley National Park (DEVA), California and Nevada—[DEVA Geodiversity Atlas] [DEVA Park Home] [DEVA npshistory.com]
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii—[HAVO Geodiversity Atlas] [HAVO Park Home] [HAVO Eruptions] [HAVO npshistory.com]
Part of a series of articles titled Volcanic Eruption Types.
Previous: Magmatic Eruptions
Next: Phreatic Eruptions
Last updated: April 14, 2023