basaltic magma ,Andesitic magma and Rhyolitic magma
basaltic,andesitic,rhyolitic
When magma is cooled and hardened, it is an igneous rock. That being said, there's only three left and those three are the three types of rocks. Igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary.
This type of magma is called basaltic magma. It has a lower silica content, which gives it a darker color compared to other types of magma. Basaltic magma is commonly associated with volcanic activity at divergent plate boundaries.
The three main types of magma are basaltic magma, andesitic magma, and rhyolitic magma. They are classified according to their mineral composition. Basaltic magma is composed of SiO2 45-55 wt%, high in Fe, Mg, Ca, low in K, Na. Andesitic magma is composed of SiO2 55-65 wt%, intermediate. in Fe, Mg, Ca, Na, K. Rhyolitic magma is composed of SiO2 65-75%, low in Fe, Mg, Ca, high in K, Na.
Magma is classified based on its silica content, which determines its viscosity and behavior. Magma is typically classified into four main types: basaltic, andesitic, rhyolitic, and dacitic, based on their silica content and mineral composition. These classifications help geologists understand the types of volcanoes and eruptions that can occur.
All types of rock can melt. Thus potentially ALL types of rocks can form a magma. Your question - asking for 3 types, is therefore meaningless.
their are many types of magma because when a volcano has soft magma that means it either exploded small or the magma was going really slow and fast magma and big exploding volcano's are hard magma.:)
The two main types of magma are mafic and felsic.
Felsic, intermediate, mafic and ultra mafic are the four broad types of magma.
Because there are different types of magma and different pathways for that magma to cool.
basaltic,andesitic,rhyolitic
That is false. The 3 main types of rocks are igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic
magma is a mixture of several different types of rock.
idfk
Phreatic eruptions occur when water comes into contact with magma, causing a steam-driven explosion. Phreatomagmatic eruptions involve the interaction of water and magma to produce explosive eruptions. Surtseyan eruptions refer to shallow submarine or coastal volcanic eruptions that interact with water or ice, creating explosive activity.
the hot type
Most viscous Felsic magma i.e. rhyolite Intermediate magma i.e. andersite Mafic magma i.e. Basalt Ultramafic magma i.e. Komatiite Least viscous