Your question is really too muddled to understand. However, melted rock is called magma.
Intrusive igneous rock.
Intrusive rock. The prefix in-helps to remember that it is made inside the earth.
Igneous rocks are formed when melted rock (magma or lava) from inside the Earth cools and hardens on or under the Earth's surface. This process involves the solidification of molten material, leading to the formation of rocks like granite, basalt, and obsidian.
Melted rock that forms inside the Earth is called magma. When magma rises to the surface and erupts through a volcano, it is referred to as lava. Magma can solidify underground to form igneous rocks once it cools and crystallizes.
a volcaneo is a mountan that has lava inside it
Igneous rock forms when melted rock (magma) from inside the Earth cools.
Magma
the earth's core
No, shale rock is not a melted material inside the earth. It is a type of sedimentary rock formed from compacted mud and clay particles. Melted materials inside the earth form igneous rocks through volcanic or intrusive processes.
intrusive rock
The molten rock inside the Earth is called magma. When magma reaches the surface, it is called lava.
It's called the liquid iron and nickel of the outer core. There is no layer of melted rock near the center of the Earth.
Igneous rock forms when melted rock from inside the Earth cools and hardens. This process can happen either beneath the Earth's surface, forming intrusive igneous rock, or at the surface, forming extrusive igneous rock. Examples include granite, basalt, and obsidian.
intrusive igneous rocks
Intrusive igneous rock.
When it cools inside the Earth, it's intrusive
More felsic than the original chemistry of the rock that was partially melted