This is true. They are both part of the Cascade Range.
Mount Everest and K2 are both located in the same mountain range, the Himalayas.
Mount St. Helens is considered a stratovolcano, not a crater or caldera. It erupted in 1980, causing the top of the mountain to collapse and create a horseshoe-shaped crater.
The crater at Mount St. Helens is about 1.2 miles (1.9 km) in diameter. It was created during the catastrophic eruption in 1980, which also caused the summit of the mountain to collapse.
Pre-eruption the summit was on the western rim of the circular crater. The lowest point was on the eastern rim aka the 'false summit'. Post eruption the northern side of the mountain blew out leaving the southern rim the new new 'summit'.
Mount St. Helens is not a crater inside a crater, but rather a stratovolcano that experienced a major eruption in 1980, which resulted in the formation of a large crater at its summit. This crater, known as the "summit crater," was created when the volcanic cone collapsed after the eruption. The mountain itself has a complex geological history, but it is primarily characterized by its single large summit crater rather than a nested crater structure.
yes
No. Mount St. Helens is a stratovolcano. There is a lava dome in the crater.
Mount saint helens is located in the U.S.A.
46.2º N, 122.2º W, State of Washington, USA
its not in a town or city its in a national forest
A mountain with a crater or a vent is typically a volcano. These geological formations are created by the accumulation of lava, ash, and other volcanic materials, often resulting in a circular depression at the summit known as a crater. The vent is the opening through which volcanic materials are expelled during an eruption. Examples of such mountains include Mount St. Helens in the United States and Mount Fuji in Japan.
Yes. Mount Saint Helens is located in Washington.