A magma chamber.
The term for the underground pool of molten rock that feeds the volcano is called a "magma chamber." This chamber stores magma, which can rise to the surface during a volcanic eruption, leading to the formation of lava flows and ash deposits.
No. Magma is molten rock underground.
Molten rock is known as Magma when underground and has not yet been erupted onto the surface.
Magma is a type of molten rock underground. Hope this helps. :)
No. Molten rock under the surface is called magma. Molten rock above the surface is referred to as lava.
magma is molten rock that is still underground and lava is molten rock that is above ground
magma chamber
Molten rock is called magma when it is underground and lava when it reaches the surface.
Lava refers specifically to molten rock that flows on the surface of the Earth during a volcanic eruption. Molten rock, on the other hand, is the hot, liquid rock below the Earth's surface that has not yet erupted. Essentially, all lava is molten rock, but not all molten rock is lava.
Yes. Magma is underground molten rock.
Any rock that becomes molten and then solidifies underground will be classified as an intrusive igneous rock.
The molten material that you find in the magma chamber is the magma itself.