Let’s Play with Earth–from Volcanoes to Soil

Volcanoes spew out soil fertility and minerals from trace elements to diamonds. The screen you’re looking at is soil.
A volcano can be scary but it is at the origin of soil and mineral deposits that supply all of mankind's needs.

A volcano can be scary but it is at the origin of soil and mineral deposits that supply all of mankind’s needs.


4.3.1 In our land/apple analogy in the previous post, we “discarded” a

good part of the land because it is mountainous, snowy, occupied

by urban areas, or inhospitable like the land located in the vicinity of

the cold poles and hot deserts. Yes, there’s much less agriculture

going on there, but these so-called “discarded” areas

have other valid purposes. They are vast playgrounds for man.


They can be areas of both great hardship and immensurate

pleasure. Places of contemplation, of beauty, of discovery, and

of sporting ecstasy are always learning opportunities, since all

the natural formations on Earth never cease to amaze us.


We overlook the orange glow from a lava lake as we

gather at an observation point high above the Halema’uma’u

Crater in the Kilauea volcano, which is located on the Big

Island of Hawaii. Galacti consults with a ranger at the Hawaii

Volcanoes National Park and tells us that the plume of gas

and steam reaching from the crater up to the sky is coming

from a volatile 500-foot-wide vent. Many of us have read that

the Kilauea volcano, which attracts travelers from around the

globe, is the world’s most active volcano.


Thanks to a special telescope Galacti provides, we can see

the orange light from the lava lake inside the crater, but we

cannot get closer—not yet. Even with Galacti as our guide,

we dare not go anywhere in the lava fields without protective

clothes. We all find a private place to change into heavy

boots, jeans, long-sleeved shirts, heat-reflective jackets,

heatreflective gloves, helmets, and gas masks.



Galacti’s Sidebar

I can travel through time and explore a wide range of journeys humans

can’t, but man’s life activities seem to revolve around four themes:

working, eating, sleeping, and playing.


 


‘Playing’ or playful behavior in humans encompasses a range of what Sam

and our audience experts call “socio-intellectual” activities: reproduction,

family, friends, study, reading, personal development, entertainment: this,

along with the other three themes, is a resume of our lives. It seems like

a short list.


 


Is that all there is to human life? Wait and see. I could learn something

too! Let’s delve deeper.


Now that we are prepared and equipped like geologists,

Galacti takes us to the other active region of the volcano, the

rift zone along the Pu’uO’o vent. We study and watch in awe

as the fountain of lava flows from this eastern lava tube, even

as we’re mindful of volcanic gases with high sulphur content

blowing our way.


“A volcano is the perfect place to visit to show you the

process of land being formed,” Galacti explains. “We can

visit other places, such as the Kalahari Desert, the African

savannah, the tundra in Siberia, the chaparrals in Mexico

and the American Southwest, boreal forests, and grasslands.


However, here in tropical Hawaii, in the thick of a tropical

rainforest, we can actually see basalt lava hardening into land.


As we watch, the slow lava flow hardens into fresh a’a,

one of two types of lava in the islands. A’a is jagged, uneven,

and sharp, while pahoehoe is generally wavy, smooth, and

flat—almost sculpted. When pahoehoe flows into the ocean,

it quickly cools into black glass, shatters, and accumulates at

the edge of the “submarine slope” along the coastline.


Other lava flows settle on the foundation provided by these

uneven fragments, and a new unstable lava delta is formed.


One of our trekkers sifts through black volcanic soil and

collects a sample. Galacti produces a snack of yellow mangoes

from the farmers market in the town of Volcano. As we bite

into the mangoes, we’re tasting the benefits of the nutrients

in the crumbly, fine volcanic soil.


Hawaiian lava is produced when heat wells up from Earth’s

core and melts crystals from the lower mantle and crust.

The lava contains nitrogen, iron, magnesium, phosphorous,

and of course sulphur (which we’re avoiding breathing).

As the group remembers, nitrogen is essential for plants,

including the mangoes we’re enjoying.


Returning to the crater overlook, we view digital images of

other volcanoes worldwide: Indonesia’s Mount Merapi (which

we can hike), Mt. Kilimanjaro in Africa, Stromboli in Italy, and

Uturuncu in Bolivia. We’re aware that we’re fortunate to be

at Kilauea, which is considered the “drive-up” volcano of the

world due to its relative safety and ease of access.


This volcanic zone is one of five on the island, although several

are dormant. One of our travelers points out that this island has

eleven of the world’s thirteen climate zones as well as different

landforms.


“It doesn’t have the African savannah,” Galacti notes as

we view picture postcards from the universe showing the

different biomes, or ecosystems. A lot of these correspond

to the inhospitable, variegated, and often spectacular parts

of the “land apple” where arable land is not the norm.


We’re witnessing the space, atmospheric, and water processes

from the last three chapters combining with the land processes to

give Earth its extremes and everything in between—from

the bitter cold at the poles to the ardent heat at the equator.


Extremes, yes, but very mild compared to interstellar bodies

and fully within man’s capacity to live on and visit, even for a

very short time, whether it be the world-record-setting sweltering

furnace of Death Valley in the United States (measured

at 56.7 degrees Celsius) or the biting iciness of Antarctica

at −89.2 degrees Celsius.


As we go about our daily business without giving it much of a thought,

land is indeed the ideal habitat for mankind.


The Explanation Blog Bonus

Volcanoes are as dangerous as they are majestic. Over 50 eruptions rock our planet every year. This video from National Geographic helps you understand what causes volcanoes to form and erupt—and shows where they are most likely to be found.



This next video about volcanoes unlocks the mystery of this worldwide majestic phenomena. They are part of the land piece of our puzzle: Inventory of the Universe



Take Inventory–the Game

Learn how to play here  and here are some concepts to use: a’a, African savannah, basalt lava, black volcanic soil, boreal forests, chaparrals Mexico and the American Southwest, eating, geologist, grasslands, Halema’uma’u Crater, Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, iron, Kalahari Desert, Kilauea volcano, lava flow, lava lake, life activities, magnesium, Mount Merapi, Mt. Kilimanjaro Africa, nitrogen, pahoehoe, phosphorous, playing, Pu’uO’o vent, rift zone, sleeping, socio-intellectual activities, Stromboli Italy, sulphur, tropical rainforest, tundra Siberia, Uturuncu Bolivia, working.


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Published on May 03, 2016 06:00
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