C Curriculum Explorer
Science·Volcanoes & Earthquakes·meta

Monitoring Volcanoes

Understand how volcanologists monitor volcanoes by looking for warning signs — gas emissions, ground swelling, small earthquakes — and that prediction involves evidence and uncertainty, not certainty

Suggested ages 9–11

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Learning journey

Your child is exploring how Earth's powerful forces work — understanding what causes volcanoes and earthquakes, how scientists monitor them, and how communities prepare for these natural events.

Evidence of understanding

  • Name at least two warning signs scientists look for before an eruption
  • Explain that volcanologists combine multiple types of evidence to assess risk
  • Discuss why volcanic prediction involves uncertainty and cannot guarantee exact timing

Assessment prompt

Can Monitoring Volcanoes explain how scientists watch for signs that a volcano might erupt — like gas, ground bulging, or tiny earthquakes — and why they can warn people but can't predict the exact moment?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.