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Actually as far as we know none of the hot spots has ever moved. The plates move over them.
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.
A volcanically active area of earth's surface, commonly far from a tectonic plate boundary is called a hot spot.
The Hawaiian Islands were each formed over a hot spot in the Earth's crust, creating a volcano. As the Pacific Plate has moved to the northwest, new islands have been created from that same hot spot over time.
The Hawaiian Islands were created when molten material moved over a hot spot.
There are more than just five hot spots throughout the whole Earth. There is the Tasman hot spot, the Hawaii hot spot, the Galapagos hot spot, the Yellowstone hot spot, Easter Island hot spot, Bouvet hot spot, St. Helena hot spot, the Canary Islands hot spot, and then Iceland hot spot.
True.
hot spot are that places on the earth where there is the chances of magma emission
Villarrica is a hot spot
Villarrica is a hot spot
Villarrica is a hot spot