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by ygra 888 days ago
Also from the blog:

> Benedikt Halldórsson of the Met Office says houses are not designed to withstand lava flow.

> »... You can expect the walls to give way from the load, and the heat in the lava is such that it burns everything in its path.«

Apart from the heat, since it's molten rock it also has considerable mass, and the lava flow continues pushing from behind.

1 comments

One weird realization I had is that lava is over three times as dense as water, so if you tired to “swim” in it, you’d basically just sit on top.
it is less about density and more about viscosity, which depends on the type and temperature.

I had an opportunity to interact with lava during a Hawaii eruption, and people could run/walk across red hot and flowing lava, but it would start melting the bottom of your shoes. This lava was definitely on the colder end of the spectrum, with a consistency like bread dough.

On the the other end of the specturm, there are very hot low viscosity lavas similar in consistency to soup. If you tried to step on that, it would be like falling into a pool.

You'd only keep sinking in until you had displaced your mass in lava. Which would happen sooner than in water.
“Sit” might not be the right verb here.
That's not what happened to Gollum