Lava lakes can form in three ways: • from one or more vents in a crater that
erupts enough lava to partially fill the crater; or • when lava pours into a crater or broad depression and partially fills the crater; or • atop a new vent that erupts lava continuously for a period of several weeks or more and slowly builds a crater progressively higher than the surrounding ground.
Behaviors Lava lakes occur in a variety of volcanic systems, ranging from the basaltic
Erta Ale lake in Ethiopia and the
basaltic andesite volcano of
Villarrica, Chile, to the unique
phonolitic lava lake at
Mt. Erebus, Antarctica. Lava lakes have been observed to exhibit a range of behaviours. A "constantly circulating, apparently steady-state" lava lake was observed during the
1969–1971 Mauna Ulu eruption of
Kīlauea, Hawaii. By contrast, a lava lake at the 1983–1984
Puʻu ʻŌʻō eruption of Kilauea displayed cyclic behaviour with a period of 5–20 minutes; gas "pierced the surface" of the lake, and the lava rapidly drained back down the conduit before the onset of a new phase of lake activity. The behaviour observed is influenced by the combined effects of pressure within the reservoir,
exsolution and
decompression of gas bubbles within the conduit and, potentially, exsolution of bubbles within the
magma reservoir. Superimposed upon this is the effect of bubbles rising through the liquid, and
coalescence of bubbles within the conduit. The interactions of these effects can create either a steady-state recirculating lake, or a lake level that periodically rises and then falls. ==Notable examples==