Exploration of the mantle is generally conducted at the seabed rather than on land because of the relative thinness of the oceanic crust as compared to the significantly thicker continental crust.
No because weather has no affect on the earth mantle and the mantle is the source of magma for the volcano.
the lava, the mantle, the outside. so there you are you have the three basic parts to a volcano.
Yes it does , The magma finds gaps through the crust ( oceanic or continental) and comes up as a volcano. It is originally in the mantle.
The liquid rock in the mantle is called magma. As it moves closer to the surface, it is then called lava when it erupts from a volcano.
The hypothesis of a volcano is the relationship between the magma and earth's mantle.
No because weather has no affect on the earth mantle and the mantle is the source of magma for the volcano.
Plastic
the lava, the mantle, the outside. so there you are you have the three basic parts to a volcano.
idk or i dont know
Yes it does , The magma finds gaps through the crust ( oceanic or continental) and comes up as a volcano. It is originally in the mantle.
That is correct. When magma travels from the mantle to the crust and reaches the surface, that is a volcano.
yes. :)
The liquid rock in the mantle is called magma. As it moves closer to the surface, it is then called lava when it erupts from a volcano.
The hypothesis of a volcano is the relationship between the magma and earth's mantle.
Volcanoes are produced by mantle plumes. ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcano )
A hotspot volcano.
The lava of a volcano originates from Earth's mantle, which is very hot due to a combination of radioactive decay and residual heat from Earth's formation.