shallow
Magma is inside the volcano, and it becomes lava when it comes out. :)
The channel through which magma rises within a volcano is called a conduit. This conduit allows magma to move from deep within the Earth up to the surface, where it can eventually erupt as lava.
if you mean after it erupts then the magma should be sticking to the sides of the volcano on the inside but it may soon melt because of the scorching heat but if you mean when it doesn't erupt then i don't know
A shield volcano is a type of volcano usually built almost entirely of fluid lava flows. They are named for their large size and low profile, resembling a warrior's shield. This is caused by the highly fluid lava they erupt, which travels farther than lava erupted from more explosive volcanoes. This results in the steady accumulation of broad sheets of lava, building up the shield volcano's distinctive form. Shield volcanoes contain low viscosity magmamaking it have flowing mafic lava.
A crater can also be called a vent, and it is the funnel shaped opening at the top of a volcano which allows magma to escape as lava. The magma chamber is the hollow deep within the volcano which is supposedly linked to the core of the planet, bringing up molten rock from the middle of earth to be taken up the vent tube of the volcano to be released to the air.
The magma that built the shield volcano likely contained low viscosity and low silica content, allowing it to flow easily and spread out over a wide area, creating the gentle slopes characteristic of shield volcanoes. This type of magma is typically basaltic in composition, which is common in hotspots or divergent plate boundaries where magma wells up from deep in the Earth's mantle.
magma
Magma is inside the volcano, and it becomes lava when it comes out. :)
The channel through which magma rises within a volcano is called a conduit. This conduit allows magma to move from deep within the Earth up to the surface, where it can eventually erupt as lava.
if you mean after it erupts then the magma should be sticking to the sides of the volcano on the inside but it may soon melt because of the scorching heat but if you mean when it doesn't erupt then i don't know
A volcan form when molten magma, formed deep in the Earth, makes its way to the surface.
Magma usually refers to molten rock when it is still underground, and a crater is a cup shaped depression in the surface whether in a volcano or not. If a crater were full of molten rock we'd call it lava. It might be fed by a magma pool below the surface.
It can be shallow or deep.
Generally, the volcano is not the result of cooling and hardening deep underground. It is the molten magma in the core of the earth that, when it rises and breaks through the earth's crust, results in volcanic action.
A shield volcano is a type of volcano usually built almost entirely of fluid lava flows. They are named for their large size and low profile, resembling a warrior's shield. This is caused by the highly fluid lava they erupt, which travels farther than lava erupted from more explosive volcanoes. This results in the steady accumulation of broad sheets of lava, building up the shield volcano's distinctive form. Shield volcanoes contain low viscosity magmamaking it have flowing mafic lava.
A crater can also be called a vent, and it is the funnel shaped opening at the top of a volcano which allows magma to escape as lava. The magma chamber is the hollow deep within the volcano which is supposedly linked to the core of the planet, bringing up molten rock from the middle of earth to be taken up the vent tube of the volcano to be released to the air.
Magma is liquified rock under the Earth's crust. When it emerges from a volcano it is renamed lava.