Lava flows are broad, laterally extensive blankets of lava formed during relatively high effusion rate eruptions, very fluid, and tend to fill-in and pond in low-lying areas
Has fast extrusion that allows individual lobes of lava to quicky coalesce back together into a sheet
Overall the effects of Lava Flow in general is, everything in the path of an advancing lava flow will be knocked over, surrounded, buried, or ignited by the extremely hot temperature of Lava
During violent eruptions, these gases are injected into the stratosphere where the sulfur dioxide reacts with water to form microscopic droplets, or aerosols, of sulfuric acid which block sunlight from reaching the Earth's surface, causing cooling
Sulfurous aerosols, along with chlorine, contribute to the destruction of stratospheric ozone, though most of this depletion comes from man-made chemicals
A common cause is when the column of lava, ash, and gases expelled from a volcano during an eruption loses its upward momentum and falls back to the ground