Plateau
An estuary.
Respratory systen
The lava is pahoehoe Lava.
runoff
I believe that would be called RUNOFF water.
a plateau
a plateau
I don't think it's exactly a plain you're looking for. Magma erupting out of a fissure and spreading over a large area leads to the formation of thick solidified sheets of lava. After later eruptions, more sheets pile up to form extensive, flat topped lava plateaus.
Lava plateaus form when fluid basaltic lava flows out of fissures.
A long crack from which lava flows through is called a fissure. These fissures can be found along volcanic zones and can release lava during volcanic eruptions.
Yes, repeated eruptions of fluid lava from fissures can lead to the accumulation of thick layers of basaltic lava flows known as flood basalts. These eruptions commonly occur in large igneous provinces and can cover extensive areas, altering the landscape significantly.
When magma is released through long open cracks, it forms a type of volcanic feature called fissures. Fissures allow magma to reach the Earth's surface without creating a single volcanic vent, often resulting in extensive lava flows.
The lava that flows from a crack in the Earth's surface is called fissure or fissure lava. It typically arises from volcanic eruptions along long cracks in the ground, known as fissures, rather than a central volcanic vent.
Ocean floor
Crater or vent. Sometimes lava also comes from fissures as well. However crater is the most commonly used term.
Flood basalts is the term to describe a flow of fluid basaltic lava that issues from cracks or fissures. It commonly covers an extensive area of thickness of hundreds of meters.
The term for the flow of magma through cracks in the Earth's surface is called volcanic eruption. During an eruption, magma is forced through fissures or vents onto the surface, leading to the formation of volcanic features like lava flows, ash clouds, and pyroclastic flows.