No. Large explosive eruptions do not produce lava, but rather produce clouds of hot ash, gas, and pumice. This is a result of gas-rich magma getting blasted into the air with such violence that the molten rock does not get a chance to flow as a liquid on the surface. These eruptions can produce towering ash columns that rain down on the country side, and pyroclastic flows, superheated avalanches of ash, rock, and gas that race down the sides of a volcano. Some explosive eruptions are phreatic, consisting of steam explosions from groundwater coming in contact with magma or rocks heated by magma.
Depends, all volcanoes have different amounts of lava.
Lava emissions are found with all active volcanoes, although some volcano emit more lave than others.
lava
The main types of volcanoes are stratovolcanoes (composite volcanoes), shield volcanoes, cinder cone volcanoes, and lava dome volcanoes. Stratovolcanoes have steep slopes due to the alternating layers of lava flows, ash, and other volcanic debris. Shield volcanoes have gentle slopes due to the low-viscosity lava flows. Cinder cone volcanoes are small and steep-sided, formed from explosive eruptions. Lava dome volcanoes are formed from slow, viscous lava flows piling up near the vent.
Basically because the type of lava they are made from is runnier and therefore spreads out more.
No.
No, volcanoes do not need lava to be volcanoes.
NO, volcanoes make lava.
Depends, all volcanoes have different amounts of lava.
I only know four they are shield volcanoes, composite volcanoes, and lava plateaus thats all I know
No, not all volcanoes shoot out the same lava. There are four different kinds of lava. 1.) Volcanic 2.) magma 3.) sedimentary 4.) diesel hope this helps!
Lava emissions are found with all active volcanoes, although some volcano emit more lave than others.
All volcanoes do have lava (magma), mostly in their young and early (ie, active) stages.
lava
volcanoes will erupt and let out lava then the lava will harden and that will be new land.
The main types of volcanoes are stratovolcanoes (composite volcanoes), shield volcanoes, cinder cone volcanoes, and lava dome volcanoes. Stratovolcanoes have steep slopes due to the alternating layers of lava flows, ash, and other volcanic debris. Shield volcanoes have gentle slopes due to the low-viscosity lava flows. Cinder cone volcanoes are small and steep-sided, formed from explosive eruptions. Lava dome volcanoes are formed from slow, viscous lava flows piling up near the vent.
lava