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A geyser may form from ground water heated by magma.
In volcanic areas the heated water is a source of escape for the volcanic gases. Water heated by magma gets very hot and needs to have a place to go or the ground will explode.
True
If it spews out into the air, it's a geyser. If it just comes out of the ground and flows into a small lake, it's a spring.
simply it breaks out due to forming of carbon dioxide in the gaps if it takes place in an close atmosphere with high pressure than turns into marble.
A geyser may form from ground water heated by magma.
In volcanic areas the heated water is a source of escape for the volcanic gases. Water heated by magma gets very hot and needs to have a place to go or the ground will explode.
It is the groundwater that is heated or made cold and comes out of the spring. The groundwater is coming out of the spring.
artesian well
Geysers are, in fact, formed when groundwater is heated by nearby magma. They can also be formed by volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occasionally as well.
geothermal energy
True
This is known as a hot spring. This process is one source of geothermal energy.
Hot springs or geysers are created when groundwater gets heated by hot intrusive rocks and can ascend via fractures in the crust. In the most extreme case so called phreatomagmatic eruptions take place. When magma ascends and reaches groundwater at shallow depths, the resulting steam expands dramatically and fractures the overlying rock thus producing a conical hole in the ground. These volcanic craters are referred to as maars.
If it spews out into the air, it's a geyser. If it just comes out of the ground and flows into a small lake, it's a spring.
A geyser is super heated water from under the ground.
The molecules of a gas move faster when heated so the pressure increases.