Yes. It sure does :l
A hot spot will often generate volcanoes. Many hot spots show a chain of extinct volcanoes in one direction, indicating that the plate moved over the stationary hot spot.
Boston was a hot place because there were a lot of volcanoes
The Hawaiian Islands are formed by volcanic activity from the Hawaiian hot spot. This hot spot causes magma to rise to the surface, creating new landmasses. The islands that currently have active volcanoes are located over the hot spot, while the older islands have moved away from it, causing their volcanoes to become dormant.
The plate that the volcano is on moves while the hot spot does not. The volcano is eventually carried away from the hot spot and no longer has a source of magma.
Hot spot volcanoes such as those in Hawaii and the Yellowstone Caldera form as a result of extra hot material rising from deep within the mantle. While most volcanoes can only form near plate boundaries, hot spot volcanoes can form in the middle of a tectonic plate. Unlike at subduction zones, which are generally associated with stratovolcanoes, hot spots that form under oceanic crust typically produce shield volcanoes. Hot spots under continental crust can be more complicated and have produced every variety of volcano.
Yes, it is not uncommon to find volcanoes at hot spots.
its a hot spot
Such volcanoes are hot spot volcanoes.
Hot spot volcanoes are not associated with plate interactions.
Magma from deep within the mantle melts through the crust which is what causes hot spot volcanoes to form
Yes. The Hawaiian Islands were formed by hot spot volcanoes.
Hot spot volcanoes are not associated with plate boundaries except where the hot spot is coincidentally near one.
A hot spot develops above the plume. Magma generated by the hot spot rises through the rigid plates of the lithosphere and produces active volcanoes at the Earth's surface. As oceanic volcanoes move away from the hot spot, they cool and subside, producing older islands, atolls, and seamounts.
A geological hot spot is where hot magma rises from the earth's mantle, which creates volcanic activity.
A hot spot will often generate volcanoes. Many hot spots show a chain of extinct volcanoes in one direction, indicating that the plate moved over the stationary hot spot.
Because it is located on a hot spot!
hot spot