A fountain of hot rock bubbling up from deep inside Earth is called a magma plume or a volcanic hotspot. These hotspots can result in volcanic activity on the Earth's surface, creating features like geysers, lava flows, and volcanic eruptions.
A slab of volcanic rock is called a "lava flow" or a "lava rock".
Solidified volcanic ash is called tephra or volcanic rock.
Molten rock material that flows over the Earth's surface is called lava. Lava is typically generated during a volcanic eruption and can create new landforms such as lava fields, volcanic cones, and lava tubes as it cools and solidifies.
Molten rock (magma) that spews from a volcano is called lava, When it cools, the lava forms igneous rocks.
A fountain of hot rock bubbling up from deep inside Earth is called a magma plume or a volcanic hotspot. These hotspots can result in volcanic activity on the Earth's surface, creating features like geysers, lava flows, and volcanic eruptions.
A slab of volcanic rock is called a "lava flow" or a "lava rock".
igneous rock
It's called a volcanic sill.
It's called a Pyroclastic flow. It comes out of the volcano after an eruption.
Hot liquid rock exposed at the Earth's surface is called lava. It forms when magma erupts from a volcano and solidifies after cooling down, creating different types of volcanic rocks. Lava flows can vary in viscosity, temperature, and composition, leading to different types of eruptions and volcanic landforms.
Hot spot volcanoes are called mantle plumes. These volcanic features occur when molten rock rises from deep within the Earth's mantle, creating localized volcanic activity on the surface. Examples include the Hawaiian Islands and Yellowstone National Park.
Solidified volcanic ash is called tephra or volcanic rock.
Molten rock material that flows over the Earth's surface is called lava. Lava is typically generated during a volcanic eruption and can create new landforms such as lava fields, volcanic cones, and lava tubes as it cools and solidifies.
Volcanic rock refers to a rock that forms from the molten material released by a volcano or a volcanically active site. Because all the molten material, called lava or magma, from a volcano is simply rock at a liquid state, is still rock, yes, volcanic rock is just a rock.
it is called a volcanic eruption
It is commonly called "volcanic glass".