Yes, many times, even within the last 450 years, there have been several such events.
It's widely believed that the eruption of a Super volcano, caused the entire Earth to Freeze, about 250 Million years ago, wiping out around 95% of all life on Earth. http://nz.news.Yahoo.com/a/-/world/5227472
Pumice can be found after volcanic eruptions, as it is formed when lava with high water and gas content is rapidly cooled and solidified. The resulting porous rock floats on water due to its low density and is often found washed up on beaches or shores.
Pumice forms from the eruption of volcanoes. It occurs from hot pressurized rock that gets ejected from the volcano during eruption.
Once magma has cooled and hardened, it is called igneous rock. This process can occur either beneath the Earth's surface, resulting in intrusive igneous rock, or on the surface after a volcanic eruption, leading to extrusive igneous rock. Examples of igneous rocks include granite (intrusive) and basalt (extrusive).
Around a volcano that has erupted recently, you would find volcanic rocks such as basalt, andesite, and rhyolite. These rocks are formed from cooled lava and ash that are ejected during volcanic eruptions. In some cases, you may also find volcanic glass or obsidian near the eruption site.
there might be another mountain that the lava has made after it cooled off or the volcano might of gotten bigger and wider.it might of made a hill out of lava. maybe it destroyed a habitat or made a great sculpture that is awesome nobody knows what lava can do for a planet
Hawaii, because hawaii itself is cooled lava
cooled magma feel from the sky and almost killed a barberian and smoke was coming from the mountain
Cooled volcanic rock material
Tephra, the material ejected into the air during an explosive volcanic eruption, consists of molten lava materials such as pumice, cinders, and volcanic ash that have cooled and solidified as they fell through the air. Large tephra deposits form where the material lands and eventually become compacted into rock called volcanic tuff.
No. First, Pompeii was buried by volcanic ash, not lava. Either way, the eruption that buried Pompeii was nearly 2,000 years ago. The ash cooled long ago.
Pumice can be found after volcanic eruptions, as it is formed when lava with high water and gas content is rapidly cooled and solidified. The resulting porous rock floats on water due to its low density and is often found washed up on beaches or shores.
Pumice forms from the eruption of volcanoes. It occurs from hot pressurized rock that gets ejected from the volcano during eruption.
Around a volcano that has erupted recently, you would find volcanic rocks such as basalt, andesite, and rhyolite. These rocks are formed from cooled lava and ash that are ejected during volcanic eruptions. In some cases, you may also find volcanic glass or obsidian near the eruption site.
Hawaii was made from cooled volcanic ashes
Cinder, cooled lava, and ash
There are lots, but they get sorted into 2 categories, volcanic and plutonic. Volcanic are rocks that cooled on/near the surface (quickly), and plutons are rocks that cooled deep below the surface (slowly).
Volcanic ash tends to contain a mixture of tiny, sharp pieces of rock and glass, made from liquid droplets volcano that have cooled quickly. It's abrasive and mildy acidic and is known as tephra. Volcanic ash is expelled with great force from a volcano during an eruption. When the ash falls, it is hot and deadly, and can ignite fires, and it can also be spread over a very wide area by winds.