it has metomorphic as rock and touchy lava
Mount Fuji is a Volcanic mountain formed from volcanic vents in the Earth's crust that builds up over time when magma comes out as lava on the Earth and dries up into rock.
Mount Fuji is a Volcanic mountain formed from volcanic vents in the Earth's crust that builds up over time when magma comes out as lava on the Earth and dries up into rock.
Mount Fuji and Mount St. Helen's are composite, or strato-volcanoes. Composed of layers of lava, tephra, ash, and other things.
Mount Fuji is the archetype of the stratovolcano and probably rivals Vesuvius for the best-know volcano. The volcano rises about 3,500 m above the surrounding plain. Fuji has erupted at least 16 times since 781 AD. Most of these eruptions were moderate to moderate-large in size.
Mt. Fuji formed as two tectonic plates converged and subducted. Mt. Fuji is a stratovolcano (composite volcano) in Japan.
Mt. Fuji is Japan's highest mountain. The lava that comes out of this volcano is silica-poor lava that is very thick and chunky.
Its lava (not magma) is a water saturated granitic lava that is typical of subduction zone volcanoes. It tends to erupt explosively due to the sudden flash evaporation of the water as the lava leaves the volcano.
The lava that comes out of Mt. Fuji is silica-poor. I am actually looking for the type of rock fragments comes out also.
In Japan.
Mount Everest has no lava because it is not a volcano
volcanos
what type of lava does mt usu