Volcanoes can form from other other volcanoes in the ring of fire
The Ring of Fire is a circle of volcanoes that rings the Pacific Ocean. The volcanoes are particularly active and earthquakes are a common malady.
The Pacific Ocean. The Ring of Fire is a group of volcanoes. The pacific tectonic plate.
of course...we have volcanoes and we are located at the Pacific Ring of Fire
the ring of fire is a chain of volcanoes, but I recall hearing somewhere around 80%
The Ring of Fire is important because of the geological processes that take place there. There are volcanoes as well as earthquakes in that area.
The ring of fire is called the ring of fire. It is a chain of volcanoes in the pacific ocean.
Volcanoes Form at Active Subduction Zones or in the ring of fire
It is an area of underwater volcanoes in the Pacific Ocean. It is called the Ring of Fire because of the fact that they are volcanoes that form a ring hundreds of miles in diameter.
Number of Volcanoes in the Ring of Fire500 volcanoes comprise the Ring of Fire, a group of volcanoes that form more of a horseshoe than a ring along the coasts on both sides of the Pacific Ocean and extends to islands east of Australia. 75% of the world's active and dormant volcanoes are part of the Ring of Fire.
a ring of volcanoes
They form the same way all volcanoes form. See related question below.
The pacific plate pushes up against the plates surrounding it; thus creating volcanoes.
The Ring of Fire
The ring is the circle of countries that have volcanoes in it.
It is a whole area of volcanoes that form a "ring" around the Pacific Ocean. It doesnt form a sort of circle but they still call it a ring. Hope this helped :)
No, it is a ring of volcanoes.
There are about 452 volcanoes in The Ring of Fire.