Pillow lavas are like bubblegum bubbles made by lava underwater, fun and squishy!
Imagine you're blowing bubbles in a bathtub full of soda. When you blow really hard, the bubble gets big and then poof, it pops! Pillow lavas work kind of like that.
Lava is hot, melted rock. When it comes out from under the ocean floor, it meets water, which is cool. The lava cools quickly, forming rounded shapes, just like bubbles. These are called pillow lavas because they look a bit like soft pillows you might find in a cozy bed.
How Pillow Lava Forms
When lava flows out underwater, the outer part of the lava cools and hardens first, making a bubble-like shape. The inside is still hot and keeps flowing, kind of like when you blow up a bubble and it stretches before it pops! Over time, these pillow shapes stack on top of each other, creating layers that look like soft, squishy stairs.
Pillow lavas are found in places where underwater volcanoes erupt, just like how you might find bubbles in your bath after a fun day playing with soapy water. Pillow lavas are like bubblegum bubbles made by lava underwater, fun and squishy!
Imagine you're blowing bubbles in a bathtub full of soda. When you blow really hard, the bubble gets big and then poof, it pops! Pillow lavas work kind of like that.
Lava is hot, melted rock. When it comes out from under the ocean floor, it meets water, which is cool. The lava cools quickly, forming rounded shapes, just like bubbles. These are called pillow lavas because they look a bit like soft pillows you might find in a cozy bed.
Examples
- Pillow lavas look like bumpy, pillow-like rocks on the ocean floor.
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See also
- Can a mountain turn into a volcano?
- How Did Hawaii Form?
- How Do Volcanoes Shape Continents?
- How Do Volcanoes Shape Earth's Surface?
- How Do Volcanoes Shape Earth's Landscape?