crystals form when lava reaches the surface and cools
False. Mountains that begin when molten material reaches Earth's surface and then cools and solidifies are known as volcanic mountains. Fault-blocked mountains are formed when tectonic forces cause the Earth's crust to be uplifted and tilted along faults.
Magma is newly formed hot molten rock that is forced upward from Earth's mantle through a vent or fissure in the crust. When this molten material reaches the surface, it solidifies and accumulates over time to form volcanic mountains.
The molten material that a volcano vents is called magma when it is still underground and lava when it reaches the surface. Magma is generated by the partial melting of rocks in the Earth's mantle, and its composition can vary depending on the type of volcano. When a volcano erupts, it releases lava, gases, and ash onto the Earth's surface.
The molten material deep inside Earth is called magma. When magma cools and solidifies, it forms igneous rock.
Geothermal heat reaches the Earth's surface through conduction, which involves the slow transfer of heat through the Earth's crust, and through convection, where hot molten rock rises towards the surface, bringing heat along with it.
The molten material that reaches earth's surface is lava :)
It is called magma
it is called magma.
Molten rock that reaches the Earth's surface is called lava.
it is called magma.
Molten rock material on Earth's surface is called lava. When under Earth's surface it's called magma
Lava.
The molten material in the two plates is called magma. It is a mixture of molten rock, gases, and other materials found beneath the Earth's surface. When magma reaches the surface, it is called lava.
The molten material in a plate is called “magma.” Magma is a mixture of molten rock, suspended mineral crystals, and dissolved gases beneath the Earth's surface. If magma reaches the surface and flows out, it is then referred to as lava.
Molten rock that is contained below the earth's surface is known as magma. Once it break the surface of the earth, as in a volcanic eruption, it is called lava.
The process by which molten material reaches the Earth's surface is called volcanic eruption. Molten rock, or magma, rises to the surface through cracks in the Earth's crust or through volcanic vents, leading to the formation of volcanic eruptions. These eruptions can vary in intensity and can result in the release of lava, ash, and gases.
Magma