Types of Volcanoes

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Across
  1. 2. Passage followed by magma.
  2. 5. Built by multiple eruptions, sometimes recurring over hundreds of thousands of years.
  3. 6. Lake Taupo lies in one of these.
  4. 8. The word used to describe a volcano that has had at least one eruption withing the last 10,000 years.
  5. 9. The word used to describe a volcano that has not erupted for at least 10,000 years and is not expected to erupt again in a comparable time scale of the future.
Down
  1. 1. The word used to describe an active volcano that is not erupting, but is expected to erupt again.
  2. 2. Also known as a scoria cone.
  3. 3. These are large volcanoes with broad summit areas and low-sloping sides, because of the low viscosity lava that flows from them.
  4. 4. A linear fracture on the Earth's surface, through which lava, pyroclastics, and gas are erupted and effused.
  5. 7. Molten rock located in the mantle of the Earth.