A pressure ridge (sometimes referred to as a tumulus or tumuli in plural form) is created in an active lava flow.[1] Formation occurs when the outer edges and surfaces of the lava flow begin to harden.[1] If the advancing lava underneath becomes restricted it may push up on the hardened crust, tilting it outward.[1] Inflation also takes place and is a process where the plastic layer of lava underneath expands as it cools and small crystals form.[1] The end result is a raised mound of hardened lava rock, usually a relatively narrow but long ridge.[1] Tension cracks form on the surface of pressure ridges and run along the axis of elongated ridges, and at both edges of broader ridges, sometimes referred to as pressure plateaus.[1] Sometimes, along the edges of a pressure ridge, the tension crack can be large enough to create a liftup cave.[1] Other caves can form inside pressure ridges in which conditions arose for the ridge to form and the lava inside subsequently drained leaving an inflationary cave.[2]