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This document provides an introduction to the field of geology. It discusses key aspects of geology like time scales and complexity. It outlines the main branches of geology, including physical geology which studies Earth's surface and interior, and historical geology which studies Earth's origin and development over time. Early views on Earth's formation, like catastrophism and uniformitarianism, are introduced. The formation of the universe, solar system, and Earth are then described based on the big bang theory and nebular hypothesis. Details are given on Earth's composition, layers, atmosphere, and oceans. Key features like continents, ocean basins, and tectonic plates are also summarized.

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Gerard Galang
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
99 views

First Le Reviewer

This document provides an introduction to the field of geology. It discusses key aspects of geology like time scales and complexity. It outlines the main branches of geology, including physical geology which studies Earth's surface and interior, and historical geology which studies Earth's origin and development over time. Early views on Earth's formation, like catastrophism and uniformitarianism, are introduced. The formation of the universe, solar system, and Earth are then described based on the big bang theory and nebular hypothesis. Details are given on Earth's composition, layers, atmosphere, and oceans. Key features like continents, ocean basins, and tectonic plates are also summarized.

Uploaded by

Gerard Galang
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LESSON 1: INTRODUCTION TO GEOLOGY

GEOLOGY  the study of the Earth and Earth’s interior, even the solar system and the universe

Aspects of Geology:
 ASPECT OF TIME – different changes happening in the organisms and the environment (because
the Earth is divided into several geologic time scales)
 ISSUE OF SCALE – using scales should be appropriate to your study (ex. micro-macro, small-large,
etc.) number that represents the printed distance compared to exact distance
 COMPLEXITY – doing laboratory process in studying geology

Main Branches of Geology

1. PHYSICAL  studying the composition and processes on the surface and beneath the
Earth
 VOLCANOLOGY – study of volcanoes and volcanic eruptions
 SEISMOLOGY – study of earthquakes and seismic activities
 ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY – application of geologic concepts and principles to
solve environmental issues and its effects to human
 ENGINEERING GEOLOGY – application of engineering projects; factoring in geologic
hazards and issues in constructions and operations
 MINING GEOLOGY – study of mineral deposits
 PETROLEUM GEOLOGY – study of oil deposits
 MINERALOGY – study of minerals
 PETROLOGY – study of rocks
 GEOMORPHOLOGY – study of Earth’s surface and land formations
 GEOPHYSICS – study of Earth especially on its magnetic field and gravitation
 GEOCHEMISTRY – study of the Earth’s chemical compositions
 PLANETARY GEOLOGY – study of planets and extraterrestial bodies
2. HISTORICAL  studying the origin and development of Earth and universe through time
 PALEONTOLOGY – study of fossils
 STRATIGRAPHY – study of rock patterns
 GEOCHRONOLOGY – study of geologic time scale

Early Views of the Formation of the Earth

 CATASTROPHISM  a view where the Earth’s landscapes are shaped by sudden great
catastrophes (and these unknown causes no longer operate today)
Made by Baron Georges Cuvier; coined by William Whelhell
 UNIFORMITARIANISM (by James Hutton)  a view where physical, chemical, and biological
laws that operate today also operated in the past (to understand the present, we should
study what happened in the past) (ex. volcanic eruptions, climate change)
LESS FORCE + TIME  BIGGER FORCE
LESSON 2: THE UNIVERSE AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM
Models of the Solar System: (AGE OF SOLAR SYSTEM: 13.7 BILLION YEARS OLD)

 HELIOCENTRISM (Copernican Model by Nicolaus Copernicus)  sun is the center of the solar
system
 GEOCENTRISM (Ptolemaic Model by Ptolemy)  Earth is the center of the solar system

Formation of the Universe and the Solar System:

1. BIG BANG THEORY  the universe is formed from a point of “singularity” (explosion of space time)
 extremely hot and dense plate explodes which expanded rapidly then slowly
while cooling

EVIDENCES:
1. Hubble’s Law (RED SHIFT) – by Edwin Hubble (1929); he discovered that the stars
are moving away from a certain reference point (it goes on a lower wavelength
where RED is a lower wavelength)
2. Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation – heat that is detected in the present
time which is due to the continuous expansion of the universe (ito daw yung hot and
dense plate na nadedetect sa mga planets)
3. Abundance of HYDROGEN and HELIUM – discovered that the planets and the stars,
especially the sun are composed of hydrogen and helium (which is a proof din daw
na nageexpand pa rin yung universe until now)

LIMITATIONS:
- It only explains the formation of the universe
- What was present before the Big Bang?
- How will it end? Will it ever end?

2. NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS  the solar system came from a cloud of dust and gas particles called nebula
 the nebula contracts then spins and slowly it cools down and started to form
bodies/ planets

NEBULA  PARTICLES SPINS (GRAVITATIONAL TO THERMAL)  COOLING  COALESCE  PLANETS

The Planets of the Solar System

 MARS, VENUS, EARTH, MARS  TERRESTIAL PLANETS; ROCKY PLANETS (composed of silicon, iron,
and oxygen); largely silicate rocks and metals that they tend to attarct to the center of
gravity
 JUPITER, SATURN, URANUS, NEPTUNE  GIANT/JOVIAN PLANETS; they are in gaseous or liquid in
form; composed of light elements (hydrogen, helium, argon, carbon, oxygen, nitrogen)

The Origin of the Moon  a Mars-sized asteroid collided to the proto-Earth and the remnants of the
collision cooled down and became the satellite of the Earth now
LESSON 3: THE PLANET EARTH AND EARTH’S INTERIOR
PLANET EARTH (AGE: 4.6-4.5 BILLION YEARS OLD)
 SHAPE: Oblate Spheroid
 TILT: Around 21.5 to 24.5 degrees
 ORBITAL SPEED: 30 km/s

How Earth was formed?


NEBULA  ACCRETION  PLANETISIMALS DIFFERENTIATION PROTOPLANETSIRON
CATASTROPHE PRESENT DAY EARTH (WITH LAYERS)
 ACCRETION  gradual accumulation of additional layers of matter in planets
 DIFFERENTIATION  transformations of bodies whose body is divided into layers that differ from one
another
 PROTO-EARTH  rocky mixture of iron, oxygen, silicon and magnesium
 IRON CATASTROPHE  the temperature of the planet surpassed and the denser elements sinks to
the center while lighter elements goes up
 PRESENT EARTH  chemically distinct layers are formed

The Origin of the Earth’s Atmosphere


 4.6 Ga  the Earth was composed of carbon dioxide
 4.5 Ga  the Earth is composed of various volcano and in the process of outgassing (where it
released carbon dioxide, methane, carbon monoxide, ammonia, and water vapor)
 3.5 Ga  the Earth is cooling and sun became the primary source of heat energy
 Blue-green algae converted carbon dioxide into oxygen that supports life

The Origin of the Earth’s Oceans


 Water vapor condensed and formed clouds and rain water formed the waters of the Earth’s ocean
 Another factor is that the Earth is bombarded by comets (which are balls of ice) that collided in the
Earth’s surface and melted and formed the oceans
 The salinity is caused by the outgassing of the planet that produced acidic conditions that
accelerated the rate of weathering of Earth’s rock surfaces and oceans became the products of
weathering.

The Earth’s Large Scale Features

 CONTINENTS
o SHIELDS  large stable areas of land that is composed of crystalline rocks
o STABLE PLATFORMS  shields covered by sedimentary rocks
 OCEAN BASINS
o CONTINENTAL SHELF  portion of a continent that is submerged under an area of shallow
water known as shelf sea
o SUBMARINE CANYON  submarine landslides
o MID-OCEAN RIDGE  portion where oceanic crust are formed
 OLDER BELTS – aged more than 100 million years old
 YOUNGER BELTS – aged less than 100 million years old (nasa ring of Pacific Ocean
mga ito)
o CONTINENTAL SLOPE  slope between continental shelf and the ocean floor
o ABYSSAL PLAIN  underwater plain on the deep ocean floor
o GUYOT  seamount with flat top
The Earth’s Interior

 Nalaman nila ang earth’s layers through the seismic waves (S-Wave (solid) and P-Wave (solid and
liquid)
 The Earth’s layers are classified because of these two tangible evidences:
o Ophiolites – exposure rocks of Earth that gives a hint of the crust (crust rocks)
o Xenoliths – foreign rocks from the mantle (volcanic products that gives mantle rocks

CRUST  MOHOROVICIC  MANTLE  GUTENBERG  OUTER CORE  LEHMANN  INNER CORE


DISCONTINUITY  BOUNDARIES BETWEEN LAYERS OF THE EARTH

Layers of the Earth based on Chemical Layers of the Earth based on Physical
Property: Property:

1. CRUST  outermost layer; composed of: oceanic 1. LITHOSPHERE  crust and the uppermost mantle;
crust (basaltic, more dense, thin, younger, less silicon, solid but brittle
composed of iron) and continental crust (granatic,
less dense, thick, older, more silicon, composed of 2. ASTHENOSPHERE  “plastic layer”; solid but mobile;
magnesium) weak layer resulting from temperature and pressure
changes
2. MANTLE  thickest layer; rich in perovskite
(mineral) and peridotite (rock) 3. MESOSPHERE  thickest layer; solid and rocky layer

3. CORE  composed of iron and nickel alloy 4. OUTER CORE  molten iron; 2900-5100 km in depth

5. INNER CORE  solid iron; 5100 – 6370 km in depth


LESSON 4: THE PLATE TECTONICS
Models of the Layers of the Earth

ISOSTASY  the concept of the model of the Earth wherein it is a concept of a floating lithosphere in
gravitational equilibrium with the Earth’s asthenosphere such that tectonic plates “float” at an elevation
that depends on thickness and density. (named by Clarence Edward Dutton)

 Airy – Heiskanen model  the density of the crust is the same throughout; elevation is directly
proportional to the depth of the crust
 Pratt – Hayford model  the volume of the crust is the same throughout; elevation is inversely
proportional to the density

Plate Tectonics History

 Ocean basins and continents had fixed geographical positions


 A. Snider (1858)  sabi niya na there is an existence of great region of dryland after The Great
Flood
 Eduard Suess (1890)  the existence of great land called it Gondwanaland and broke up into
continents we have today (and yung malaking ocean tinawag niyang Tethys Ocean)
 Alfred Wegener (1915)  created the CONTINENTAL DRIFT THEORY (PANGAEA BREAK-UP)
o 200 Ma  there is a super continent called PANGAEA and super ocean called
PANTHALASSA
o 180 Ma  the PANGAEA broke up into two continents: LAURASIA and GONDWANALAND
o 65 Ma  LAURASIA broke up and formed NORTH AMERICA, ASIA, and EUROPE while
GONDWANALAND broke up and formed SOUTH AMERICA, AFRICA, INDIA, AUSTRALIA and
ANTARTICA
 EVIDENCES OF CONTINENTAL DRIFT THEORY
1. GLOBAL GEOGRAPHY
 “jigsaw fit” of South America and Africa (Wegener noticed the remarkable
similarity between the coastlines in the opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean
 In 1960, Sir Edward Bullard used continental shelf to fit South America and Africa
2. TYPE OF ROCKS  Wegener matched up mountain ranges that have the same
type of rocks and found out that there are mountain belts today fitted in a single
mountain ranges before
3. FOSSILS (remains, traces, or imprints of organisms that preserved on Earth’s crust
10,000 years ago)  found fossils of Mesosaurus, Lystrosaurus, and Glossopteris in
different parts of the world (especially in South America, Africa, Antartica, Australia,
and India)
4. PALEOCLIMATE  evidences of glacial deposits are found in Antartica, South
America, Africa, India, and Australia (and sinasabe na magkakasama sila noon sa
iisang continent below the Earth)
 Harry Hess (1960)  proposed that the formation of the plate tectonics is because of SEAFLOOR
SPREADING  happens at the bottom of an ocean where magma from upper mantle rises through
the faults between oceanic plates (mid-ocean ridges) and forms new crust as the plates move
away from each other. (Kapag mas malapit sa ocean ridge, mas thick and mas younger. Kapag
malayo na sa oceanic ridge, mas thin and mas matanda na)
o EVIDENCES OF SEAFLOOR SPREADING HYPOTHESIS:
 HOTSPOTS  where magma pushes up from the mantle and form volcanoes
(upwelling) and dahil plates move along the surface, it creates another volcano and
yung mga naiiwang volcano ay nawawalan na ng magma kaya sila nagiging
extinct (ex. Hawaii moving NW– Loihi kapag extinct na siya)
 PALEOMAGNETISM  it formed magnetic stripes with different magnetic polarity and
nag-iiba ang polarity as the plates move along (CURIE POINT – temperature at which
mineral’s magnetism is lost)
 SEISMIC ACTIVITY  interaction of plates causing earthquakes (and seismic waves)
Three Types of Plate Boundaries
1. DIVERGENT  two plates move apart; constructive plate boundaries constructing more oceanic crusts
and bodies of water (ex. East-Pacific Rise, Mid-Atlantic Ridge)
2. CONVERGENT  two plates move together forming trenches, volcanic arcs, mountains; destructive
plate boundary; may subduction zone (forming trenches, volcanic arcs) and orogenic belts (forming
mountain ranges)
 OCEANIC-CONTINENTAL CONVERGENCE – oceanic crust subducts (more dense) forming
continental volcanic arcs (ex. Andes Mountain)
 OCEANIC-OCEANIC CONVERGENCE – denser, older, and faster oceanic crust subducts forming
island arcs (ex. Philippines)
 CONTINENTAL-CONTINENTAL CONVERGENCE – colliding two continental crusts together forming
mountains (ex. Himalayas)
3. TRANSFORM  two plates slide-past to each other forming fault lines; conservative plate boundary (ex.
San Andreas Fault)

Driving Mechanisms of Plate Tectonics


 PLATE-MANTLE CONVECTION  process of convection current that moves the lithosphere along the
mantle
 SLAB PULL AND RIDGE PUSH
o RIDGE PUSH  gravitational push of plates from the ridge to the subduction zone
o SLAB PULL  when plates move farther away from the ridge, it cools down and becomes
denser then sinks at subduction zone

LESSON 5: MINERALS
Minerals
 N-ATURALLY OCCURING  product of nature (walang synthetic processes na naganap)
 I- NORGANIC  walang carbon components ang minerals
 H- OMOGENEOUS SOLIDS  uniform in apperance because of its chemical composition
 D- EFINITE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION  has a unique chemical composition
o POLYMORPHISM – different minerals, same composition, different structure (ex. pyrite and
marcasite are both made of iron sulfide FeS2)
o ISOMORPHISM – different minerals, different composition, same structure (ex. halite (NaCl)
and pyrite (FeS2))
 O- RDERED INTERNAL STRUCTURE  crystalline atomic structures of minerals(all minerals are crystals
but not all crystals are minerals)
* MINERALLOIDS  mineral-like substance which are either amorphous (does not demonstrate
crystallinity) or organic in nature (ex. pearl, obsidian)

Properties of Minerals
1. COLOR  caused by absorption or reflection of various wavelengths of light (but unrealiable diagnostic
property of minerals)
 IDIOCHROMATIC – observed as shades of one color
 ALLOCHROMATIC – observed as various shades of color (ex. quartz)
2. STREAK  color of minerals in powdered form and not necessarily identical to its color
 Metallic minerals have dark colored streaks
 Non-metallic minerals usually have white streaks
3. LUSTER  ability of the minerals to reflect light
 Metallic – shiny
 Sub-metallic – medyo shiny
 Vitreous – looks like a glass
 Greasy – looks oily
 Silky – looks like silk
 Pearly – looks like pearl
 Earthy- does not reflect light
 Resinous – looks like amber (ex. sphalerite)
4. DIAPHENEITY or TRANSPARENCY  how light transmission interacts with the surface of the minerals
OPAQUE  TRANSLUCENT (ADAMANTINE)  TRANSPARENT
5. HABIT  shape and aggregates that a certain mineral is likely to form
6. MINERAL STRENGTH/HARDNESS  resistance of minerals to sratch or abrasion

7. CLEAVAGE  planes where chemical bonds are weak where a mineral would tend to break (planes
are repetitive or parallel, smooth, planar, and has unequal strength)
8. FRACTURE  where chemical bonds are uniform in strength in all directions (ex. obsidian – conchordial
fractures or circular shaped fractures)

Other Properties of Minerals


 SPECIFIC GRAVITY  ratio of weight of the volume of a substance and the weight of the same
volume of water (the heaviness of the mineral)
 EFFERVERENCE  reaction of minerals to acid of carbonates forming bubbles and fizz sounds (ex.
calcite  calcium carbonate)
 MAGNETISM  magnetic property of minerals (ex. magnetite and ilmenite)

Types of Minerals
O, Si, Al, Fe, Ca, Mg, Na, K  8 elements that makes up the majority of the minerals

 SILICATES (SiO4) makes up the most types of minerals and 90% of the crustal composition (silica-
oxygen tetrahedron – the unit-cell of silicate minerals)

TYPES OF SILICATE MINERALS:


o NESOSILICATES (came from the word “nesogean” meaning “island”)  isolated tetrahedron;
Si-O tetrahedron sharing with Mg, Fe, or Ca (ex. olivine and garnet)
o INOSILICATES (chain silicates)  formed a single or double bond chains; possesing a
parallel single (1:3) or double (2:5.5 or 4:11) chains (ex. pyroxene (single chain) and
amphibole (double chain)
o PHYLLOSILICATES (sheet silicates)  possesses parallel sheets of silica tetrahedron (2:5) (ex.
micas, biotite, muscovite)
o TECTOSILICATES (framework silicates)  possesses a 3D framework tetrahedron; makes up
the most number of silicate minerals (ex. quartz and feldspar)
 NON-SILICATES  divided based on negatively charged ion/complex ions that the members have
in common

TYPES OF NON-SILICATES:
o OXIDES  either associated to or form many of the ores from which valuable metals can be
extracted (ex. hematite (brownish red color, brownish red streak, “specularite” metallic
variety), magnetite, corondum)
o SULFIDES  associated to or form many of the economically important ores; opaque distinct
color (ex. pyrite and galena)
o SULFATES  formed in evaporatic setting where highly saline water evaporates (ex. barite,
anyhydrite, gypsum)
o HALIDES  commonly formed in evaporated setting (ex. fluorite, halite (NaCl))
o PHOSPHATES  commonly found in living organisms (ex. apatite)
o CARBONATES  abundant in marine environment; the mineral that comprises caves (ex.
calcite)
o NATIVE ELEMENTS  single element minerals (ex. gold, silver)

LESSON 6: IGNEOUS PROCESSES


Magma  completely or partially molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface
 SOLID COMPONENTS  early crystals, unmelted rock components
 LIQUID COMPONENTS  melt, ions of minerals
 GAS COMPONENTS  volatiles (H2O, CO2, SO2)

Types of Magma
FELSIC INTERMEDIATE MAFIC ULTRAMAFIC
TYPES
(granatic) (andesitic) (basaltic) (picritic)
SILICA CONTENT
IRON,
MAGNESIUM
CONTENT
VISCOSITY

ERUPTIVE
BEHAVIOR
COMMONLY
continental crust continental crust oceanic crust upper mantle
FOUND IN

Magma Generation (How Magma is Created?)


 LIQUIDUS  melt filled and start of crystallization (boundary between magma and mantle)
 SOLIDUS  complete solidification and melt + crystal (boundary between crust and magma)
 GEOTHERM  temperature gradient of Earth with depth

HOW TO MELT ROCKS:


1. INCREASE IN TEMPERATURE (hotspot volcanism) – as the temperature goes higher, the
geotherm shift to the right in the magma field
2. DECREASE IN PRESSURE (rift volcanism) – adiabatic compression; as the pressure goes
down, geotherm will shift upward towards the magma field
3. ADDITION OF VOLATILES (subduction zones)
Magma Differentiation (How Magma Evolves?)  any process which cause magma
composition to change

 ASSIMILATION OF HOST ROCKS  when molten body moves up through the “country” rocks and
dislodges (draws out) “foreign” rock fragments which then melts and is incorporated to the magma
body (natutuklap yung country rocks sa foreign rocks)
 MAGMA MIXING (MAGMA MINGLING)  a magma intrudes another magma that has different
composition (magma mixing to another magma; ito ang nagpa-trigger sa pagputok ng Mt.
Pinatubo)
 FRACTIONAL CRYSTALLIZATION  changing the composition of the melt as crystallization progress
(denser minerals goes to the bottom while less dense minerals goes to the top)

Volcanism  phenomenon which magma is erupted in the surface through volcano as lava

Why do volcanoes erupt?


 INFLUX OF MAGMA  addition of new magma and magma mixing
 DEGASSING OF MAGMA  depressurization (decreasing pressure) concentrates volatiles forming
bubbles ; bubbles coalesce and expands ; fracturing occurs

Volcanic Explosivity Index  relative measures of explosiveness of volcanic eruption based on: (1)

volume of the products, (2) height of eruptive cloud, and (3) frequency (gaano kadalas pumutok ang
bulkan)

Parts of the Volcano


 CONDUIT (PIPE)  channel inside the volcano that contains the magma
 *VEST 
 CRATER  bowl-shaped opening on the surface of the volcano

Products of Volcanic Eruptions


 PYROCLASTIC MATERIALS (BOMBS AND BLOWS)  fragmented crystals or rocks that are either from
the crystallizing magma or from the volcano edifice itself
 VOLCANIC GASES  released gasses of the juvenile or heated gasses of sulfur dioxide, carbon
dioxide, carbon monoxide, and water vapor
 LAVA FLOWS  released form of magma ; cooling joints reflects the high temperature during its
emplacement
o PAHOEHOE – smooth, billowy, ropy flow
o AA – high viscosity, rough or rubbly flow

Types of Volcanoes
 ACCORDING TO THE DEGREE OF EXPLOSIVITY
o EXPLOSIVE (from felsic and intermediate magma)  pyroclastic rocks, ash falls, pyroclastic
flows, debris avalanche
o NON-EXPLOSIVE (from mafic and ultramafic magma)  lava flows, fractures, flow basalts

 ACCORDING TO THE TYPE OF MATERIAL AND ERUPTIVE TYPE


o MAGMATIC  involves magma rise
 HAWAIIAN AND ICELANDIC TYPE  lava flows from vent (circular flow; Hawaiian) or
fissures (linear flow ; Icelandic); low level of eruption
 VULCANIAN TYPE  highly viscous lava; erupts bombs and blows
 STROMBOLIAN TYPE  lava formations ; short-lived eruptions
 PELEAN TYPE  create large eruptive columns, glowing gases, lateral movement of
the volcanic products
 PLINIAN TYPE  volumnous explosive ejections, pumic and pyroclastic flows, high
eruptive clouds (PLINIAN  FAULTING  COLLAPSE  CALDERA)

o PHREATIMAGMATIC  interaction of magma and water


 SURTSEYAN  magma interacts with water
 SUBGLACIAL  lava interacting with ice

o PHREATIC  expansion of steam produced by heats of the underground or ground water


 GEYSER (water) and FUMAROLES (steam)  no magma but involves steam or hot
meteoritic fluids

 ACCORDING TO VOLCANIC ACTIVITY


o ACTIVE  within the last 10,000 years (with records of volcanic activity or eruptions)
o POTENTIALLY ACTIVE  1.65 Ma to 10, 000 years
o INACTIVE  no historical records of eruption

 ACCORDING TO ITS SHAPE OR ARCHITECTURE


o SHIELD  flat, warrior shield shaped volcano built from lava flows (ex. Mauna Kea)
o COMPOSITE OR STRATOVOLCANO  perfect cone shape; has many layers of hardened lava
o DOME  circular mound-shape volcano resulting from the new intrusion of lava (ex. Mt. St.
Helens)
o PYROCLASTIC CONES  has short-lived volcanic activity ; collection of airborne ash, lapili,
and block as they fall around the vest
o *CALDERA  formed when a denser solid goes above the shallow magma (formed after a
Plinian type of eruption)

Philippine Volcanoes  24 ACTIVE VOLCANOES and MORE THAN 200 INACTIVE VOLCANOES (most

of the volcanoes are caused by subduction zones of the Philippines)

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