Thursday, May 17, 2012

Pyroclastic flows, sometimes called "nuees ardentes" (French for "glowing clouds") are hot, rapidly-moving mixtures of ash, rock fragments and gas flowing from a collapsed eruption column or lava dome. Pyroclastic flows travel down valleys and completely devastate the area over which they flow. They can travel at speeds at speeds of 100 mph or more and can be extremely destructive because of their high temperature and mobility.

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