The core of the volcanoes are located deep down the earths crust where the temperature increases over three thousand degrees. The metals are in a liquid form and the core is always a grat thing to study foe the researchers but less information is available till now.
The inner core and the liquid outer core does.
Yes, the Earth's crust sits on the upper mantle and is not directly connected to the Earth's core. The core is composed of molten iron and nickel, while the crust is a rocky outer layer that is separated from the core by the mantle.
Volcanoes have given the earth her atmosphere by releasing water vapor into the air. Volcanoes helped cool the earth in her infancy releasing her heat from the molten core.
I think core was very heat pressure force land start erupted in Washington, and other states or countries had a volcanoes. The water is bottom that behind core was very heat
Yes, Mercury has volcanoes, but they are not active like those on Earth. The planet's internal heat also comes from its cooling core and radioactive decay.
The inner core and the liquid outer core does.
No
it is said that Philippines was formed by volcanoes. it appears that the volcanoes underneath the ocean has the same core of the volcanoes found here in the Philippines
it is said that Philippines was formed by volcanoes. it appears that the volcanoes underneath the ocean has the same core of the volcanoes found here in the Philippines
Igneous, Sedimentary and Metamorphic (:
Volcanoes don't draw lava. The Earth's Core is molten rocks and metals. As tectonic plates move the force old land down into the core where it melts and joins the other molten material and also creates openings that the pressure of the molten core escapes through. Those openings are volcanoes. Underwater volcanoes are the most common as that's where most fault lines lie.
Yes it is called the outer core because they feed volcanoes that explosively erupt.
hephaestus used lava for his forge
the core shakes causing the plates to move forming volcanoes ect..(that is why volcanoes spit out lava because it comes from the core.)
Yes, the Earth's crust sits on the upper mantle and is not directly connected to the Earth's core. The core is composed of molten iron and nickel, while the crust is a rocky outer layer that is separated from the core by the mantle.
The Venus has a huge amounts of volcanoes!
Ordinary mountains do not have a "plumbing system" too deliver molten rock to the surface. Volcanoes are connected to a magma chamber a few miles underground, which in turn is connected to the mantle.