it's called lava! lava is what's on the surface of a volcano, and magma is what's underneath
Molten material that flows from volcanoes is called lava. This hot, liquid rock can reach temperatures of over 1,300 degrees Fahrenheit. As it cools and solidifies, it forms igneous rocks like basalt or andesite.
Magma.
Shield volcanoes may contain molten rock called magma, particularly of a basaltic composition.
Magma that comes out of volcanoes is called lava. Lava is molten rock that flows out of a volcano during an eruption.
The molten material that reaches earth's surface is lava :)
it's called lava! lava is what's on the surface of a volcano, and magma is what's underneath
WHEN MALTEN MATERIALS ARE INSIDE THE VOLCANOES ITS CALLED MAGMA WHEN IT IS OUTSIDE THE VOLCANOES ITS CALLED LAVA
Molten material that flows from volcanoes is called lava. This hot, liquid rock can reach temperatures of over 1,300 degrees Fahrenheit. As it cools and solidifies, it forms igneous rocks like basalt or andesite.
Magma.
Molten material below ground is called magma, and molten material above ground is called lava.
Volcanism is the process by which molten rock material is moved from one part of the earth's crust to another, or from within the earth's crust to the surface. This molten material is called *magma* while it is still beneath the surface, but it is called *lava* as soon as it reaches the surface. All this molten rock material eventually cools and solidifies into igneous rock.
All volcanoes have molten rock. o.0
Shield volcanoes may contain molten rock called magma, particularly of a basaltic composition.
All volcanoes are formed by the movement of molten rock, called magma, from beneath the Earth's surface. They are typically cone-shaped landforms created by the accumulation of erupted material. Volcanoes can be classified as active, dormant, or extinct based on their historical activity.
Magma that comes out of volcanoes is called lava. Lava is molten rock that flows out of a volcano during an eruption.
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.
The molten material that reaches earth's surface is lava :)