Want this question answered?
I am LAVA.
Liquid rock is called magma when it is underground and lava when it is above ground.
Over thousands of years rain water seeps through cracks in the Earth's crust and collects in underground reservoirs between the crust and the mantle. The mantle heats the water into a super-heated liquid and, voila!, you have a geothermal reservoir!
Its a liquid ball on which solids float - and move around.
Liquid Ice (i don't know)
godzilla
volcanic lava
im pretty sure that's its lava
I am LAVA.
you know when there is water underground when you here the sound of water...(underground)...or see water on your lawn when there is no liquid to be found... : )
Lava is a liquid, not rocks.
No, a landslide is masses of land that has been crushed and is in a liquid-ish state and slides down the sides of mountains, ranges anywhere.. a fault is a line underground that when land masses move and hit the fault causes earthquakes.
At the poles and underground. It is ice.
Yes it does.
Magma, if underground, and Lava, if above the ground
It is hard to do because it is a liquid being taken out of a solid.
the answer is about 65%