Nobody really knows and it also depends on the size of the volcano.
If you mean 'how does lava release itself from the volcano', it erupts through the volcano's crater. But if you mean 'how does lava erupt from the volcano', then sorry, I have no answers to that.
it has aa lava, so it is not fluid like, but still basaltic.
yes because the earth plate is straight when the earth quake comes the volcano moves but nothing will happen but if its a really big earth quake And the volcano will erupt because of the pressure and the plates can hold the pressure so the volcano will erupt so can a tsunami occur.
I believe the answer you may be looking for is either Lava or a Volcano
It should be magma is the hottest because it is usually molten rock that has not reached the surface during an eruption.Lava is 2nd hottest. It is the molten rock we see when a crack in the crust of the earth or a volcano eruption allows molten rock from beneath the crust to come up.
Very much so. A volcano is the eruption of molten rock as lava.
Take a Metal that can hold the Heat of the Lava and stay behind it until the lava stops.
Magma is inside of the volcano and has molten rock in it. To where lava is outside the volcano and does not have as much molten rock in it as Magma does.
Depends, all volcanoes have different amounts of lava.
A lava flow is where lava flows down the side of a volcano.
Yes, lava is on the outside of a volcano. Magma is on the inside of a volcano.
Well it depends on how bad the lava flow is. If the lava is flowing slow then the shape of the volcano won't change much, But if it flows with force then bits of the volcano will fall off and change the shape of the volcano. Hope this answer helps!!
yes. magma is the lava that is in the volcano and lava is the magma that is outside a volcano
stinky lava and puny volcano
I lava you!!
What did the BOY VOLCANO say to the GIRL VOLCANO? Answer: I LAVA U
Lava. When the lava comes out of the volcano, gravity pulls the lava down the cone of the volcano, and depending the the viscocity of the lava, it forms a 'cone' or 'shield' as it cools. Thinner lava forms a shield volcano; thicker lava forms a steeper cone shape.