Magma that does not reach the surface is called intrusive rock
Answer:
A river forms from water moving from a higher elevation to a lower elevation, all due to gravity. When rain falls on the land, it either seeps into the ground or becomes runoff, which flows downhill into rivers and lakes, on its journey towards the seas.
Answer:
It would look like an uplift or dome because the laccolith below is a lens-shaped mass of magma that pushes the rock above it upward.
Explanation:
The laccolith is formed by volcanic activity. Not all of the magma is contracted in the volcano and comes out form it or solidifies in it. Some of the magma actually moves below ground in the surrounding area, using the cracks as pathways. When this magma cools off deep underground it creates intrusions.
One of those intrusions is the laccolith. The laccolith can be described as having a lens-shape, or that it looks like a mushroom. The laccolith is in intrusion that pushes the crust upwards, so the surface above it uplifts or looks like a dome that sticks out in its surroundings.
The laccolith may come out eventually on the surface because of the weathering and erosion, but for that to happen usually millions of years are needed.
<span>The correct answere for this question is A - the three major types of volcanoes are shiel volcanoes, cinder volcanoes and composite volcanoes. Two other tyypes of volcano are the lava dome volcano, and the Rhyolite Caldera complex (this type is not common, but are the most dangerous and explosive - Yellowstone is an example of this type of volcano).</span>