No. An island can only be a volcano if it was a volcano to begin with. That said, a volcano can be dormant for hundreds of years, so it may not be readily apparent that an island is volcanic.
There are many islands with volcanoes particularly in the Indian and Pacific oceans, Hawaii for example has several active volcanoes as do the Canary islands in the Atlantic Ocean.
The canary islands are all sitting on the top of an underwater volcano that has been dormant for hundreds of years. I also know that most of the individual islands have there own volcano's and on tenerife it is due to erupt soon as it does every 100 years. So the islands are on the top of a volcano with a volcano on top of most of them.
The Falcon Volcano on the Tonga Islands are in the Indo-Australian Plate- a convergent boundary.
The Didicas volcano hasn't done much if any significant damage. It has however killed three fishermen and blanketed the nearby Islands in ash at the times it has erupted.
Hey buddy, is it Kanga volcano or Kanaga Volcano? If it is Kanaga volcano, it's located in northern of Kanaga island in the western Aleutian islands.
An underwater volcano. The volcano that made Hawaii was a shield volcano.
BARREN ISLAND in Andaman and Nicobaar islands is the Only Active Volcano in INDIA.
Volcano Islands are the remains of dormant or still active volcanoes that have formed islands of land above the surface of the sea.
The canary islands are all sitting on the top of an underwater volcano that has been dormant for hundreds of years. I also know that most of the individual islands have there own volcano's and on tenerife it is due to erupt soon as it does every 100 years. So the islands are on the top of a volcano with a volcano on top of most of them.
It is not on any continent - it is part of the Hawaiian islands which are in the Pacific ocean.
phillipines
Hawaii
abridoa normal
There aren't any Portuguese islands of Gibraltar. You may be thinking about Madeira off Africa.
the Cayman Islands were formed from an eruption of an underwater volcano.
Its a volcano in the Hawaiian Islands
under the sea , on islands
The Falcon Volcano on the Tonga Islands are in the Indo-Australian Plate- a convergent boundary.