Across
- 4. This type of magma occurs at destructive plate boundaries
- 8. This model identifies the root causes of vulnerability
- 10. A flow composed of rock, mud and water originating on the flanks of a volcano
- 11. The name given to a plate boundary where new crust is generated
- 12. The process whereby new oceanic plates are pushed apart by the force of the mid-ocean ridge
- 13. This model shows how an overlap of a natural hazard and a vulnerable population can result in a disaster
- 14. This type of explosive eruption occurs when magma heats ground or surface water
- 17. These are produced by earthquakes in the crust and travel through the Earth's layers
- 20. Long, curved chain of oceanic islands associated with intense volcanic and seismic activity
- 21. This measures the total energy released by an earthquake at the moment it occurs
- 22. Oceanic crust is destroyed here
- 23. This is increasingly seen as a major driving force for plate movement
- 24. A model that shows how a country or region might respond following a hazard event
Down
- 1. The study of past changes in the Earth's magnetic field, determined from minerals contained in oceanic crust
- 2. The name given to a tsunami warning system found across the Pacific
- 3. A measure of the size or magnitude of a volcanic eruption
- 5. The name given to a plate boundary where crust is neither created or destroyed
- 6. A flood caused by the melting of an icecap or glacier by a volcanic eruption
- 7. This type of magma occurs at constructive plate boundaries
- 9. The name given to a plate boundary where crust is destroyed
- 15. The name given to smaller earthquakes that follow a large earthquake
- 16. The ability to protect lives, livelihoods and infrastructure from destruction, and to restore areas after a natural hazard has occurred
- 18. This volcano caused widespread disruption across Europe in 2010
- 19. The ability to anticipate, cope with, resist and recover from a natural hazard
