Boiling molten lava (melted rocks) are deposited into the oceans and cool, forming land The lava is cooled in the water which slowly stacks up until it reaches the surface. The newly formed ground is highly fertile and grow plants quickly.
The volcanic dust spread over arable land enriches the soil because it contains minerals.
Yes, lava from a volcano can build up the land over time as it cools and solidifies, forming new layers of rock and contributing to the growth of the volcano. This process is essential in creating new landmasses and reshaping the landscape.
When lava reaches the surface, it quickly hardens into rock. The resulting rock will have either a glassy texture (with no crystals) or have a fine-grained texture (with small crystals) because the minerals have little or no time to crystallize.
Volcanoes do not reproduce like living organisms do. They form through processes involving the movement of magma from within the Earth's mantle to the surface through volcanic eruptions. When a volcano erupts, it releases lava, ash, and gases, which can contribute to the growth of the volcano or create new land formations.
I think so.......it's a mountain isn't it?
No
people will be killed, and other things
Some Constuctive processes are volcanos. When a volcano erupts it make destroys but then makes new land form. So do earthquakes
A volcano shapes the earth because when a volcano erupts, the lava hardens, forming new land on the earth's surface
Lava and rock explode out of the volcano then lava pours down the volcano covering the land then turning into rock making the volcano bigger.
People in volcanoes may die and will lose their homes/land when the Volcano erupts.
When a volcano erupts, it then could build up more land, due to the lava drying up. Also it can damage the land, crops, vegetation, vice-versa. -TheBestAnswers.
it is both destructive and constructive forcesYes, because when a volcano erupts it creates land which is a constructive force.After that, the volcano can destroy things or have a destructive force.So that is what I think. BYE!
I'm afraid your question isn't quite... grammatically correct. If your question is supposed to be "Is a volcano a land form?", then the answer is yes, it is indeed a land form.
Yes, it can cause new land if an underwater volcano erupts due to Continental Drift, and the lava goes hard.
The volcanic dust spread over arable land enriches the soil because it contains minerals.
yes.