There are different temperatures
_when the magma remains below the depth at which magmas become solid _when the magma retains enough water to keep it from solidifying, regardless of depth
Igneous rock
As rock is pushed down toward the the Earth's center it gets hotter and hotter.
Cools ^ If you took this answer then is Magma relevant to Ice? Magma forms when the solid rock in the crust and upper mantle melts. ^Why not erase it then?
No. Magma is melted rock. The rock deep in the mantle is almost entirely solid.
Cooling to a solid.
Surface, edge, and vertex are the different parts of solid figures.
Igneous rocks are formed when magma solidifies, or becomes solid. Rocks become magma when they undergo extreme heat.
_when the magma remains below the depth at which magmas become solid _when the magma retains enough water to keep it from solidifying, regardless of depth
the magma cool and then it becomes a solid and that solid will then become a plate tectonic
Igneous rock
As rock is pushed down toward the the Earth's center it gets hotter and hotter.
It cools and becomes solid
Cooling a liquid turns it into a solid. I.E. Freezing water into ice, or magma cooling into rock.
Liquid
When magma solidifies, it becomes igneous rock.
Magma is under the surface of Earth's crust. Rocks on earth's surface are well ... on Earth's surface. Magma is also molten rock, not solid rock like the rocks on earth's surface.