volcanic ash
The answer is : Magma with low viscosity. It makes for a weak volcanic eruption. If the viscosity is low (thin), non-explosive eruptions usually begin with fire fountains due to release of dissolved gases. When magma reaches the surface of the earth, it is called lava.
when it starts getting warm and bubbling up and then about week later it would erupt.
Not really. Even though they knew about it a week in advance, they weren't prepared enough.
Yes. In an average year about 50 volcanoes erupt worldwide. Taken as a simple average this works out to a little less than one eruption every week. In addition, an eruption may continue, either continuously or sporadically, for weeks or even years. Except in a few cases of a shared magma supply, what one volcano is doing will not affect another. Given how often some volcano erupts, it would not be uncommon for two volcanoes hundreds or thousands of miles to erupt on the same day, though these eruptions would be unrelated to one another.
Molten rock, and lava harden over a irregular period of time causing a mountain to raise. Such events can happen in either extremely rapidly or very slowly, Paricutín in Mexico literally appeared overnight in a farmers field. In only one week the volcano went from being a fissure in the ground to a 5 storied mountain; today the volcano is 9,186 ft tall. the Hawaiian islands are examples of slowly growing volcanic mountains that rose out of the ocean thousands upon thousands of years ago and continue to grow today.
The answer is : Magma with low viscosity. It makes for a weak volcanic eruption. If the viscosity is low (thin), non-explosive eruptions usually begin with fire fountains due to release of dissolved gases. When magma reaches the surface of the earth, it is called lava.
I'm not giving false hopes but maybe if there is not a nother volcanic eruption
The answer is : Magma with low viscosity. It makes for a weak volcanic eruption. If the viscosity is low (thin), non-explosive eruptions usually begin with fire fountains due to release of dissolved gases. When magma reaches the surface of the earth, it is called lava.
when it starts getting warm and bubbling up and then about week later it would erupt.
Well, I would suggest going to a Doctor. But, if you became pregnant within that week, it could be probably be bleeding. !
Mount Kilauea's last eruption last for 1 week 4 days
Mt. Etna in Sicily was undergoing a minor eruption earlier this week.
Not really. Even though they knew about it a week in advance, they weren't prepared enough.
I would confess my stupidity to my doctor or eye specialist.
you could be pregnant but there is a chance that it just came later then schedule, Your period will do that. if a week has gone by since you should have started your period i would contact your doctor to see if you are pregnant or not
a week later?
later