A volcano is made of extrusive igneous rock. The specific type of igneous rock will vary from one volcano to another.
blue the cotopaxi volcano has red magma when turned to rock. it also has a high silica content
it falls in magma and melts to molten rock and when it pops out of the volcano and hardens its a igneous rock!
When magma cools, it forms igneous rock.
Igneous rock may either form on or near a volcano or deep underground where magma has intruded into the crust.
Metamorphic rock that melts turns to magma. This only becomes lava if it is erupted to the surface in a volcano.
The magma from a volcano solidifies and forms an igneous rock
igneous rock
A volcanic neck forms when the magma inside a volcano turns into rock and the outside of a volcano wears away, leaving the spiky-shaped rock magma.
the magma cools and hardens and then it becomes the surface of around the volcano like a rock land
Magma is underground and when it comes out of the ground, through a volcano, magma turns to lava. As the lava cools it forms an igneous rock.
Any type of Igneous rock.
Extrusive igneous rocks
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.
Molten rock (magma) that spews from a volcano is called lava, When it cools, the lava forms igneous rocks.
The most common type of rock that forms near an active volcano is igneous rock. This type of rock forms from the cooling and solidification of magma or lava. Examples include basalt, andesite, and rhyolite.
The molten rock that comes out of a volcano is called a magma.
Volcanic ash forms when rock or liquid magma is reduced to tiny fragments by an explosive eruption.