Booty
Mt. Helens is formed on a subduction plate boundary, while a hotspot is formed because of mantle plumes, which are usually not on a plate boundary.
That's a very good question.
Yes, the Arenal Volcano is not located on a hot spot. It is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire and is a stratovolcano formed from a subduction zone.
Hekla is a stratovolcano in Iceland, which is characterized by a steep cone shape and explosive eruptions. It is one of Iceland's most active volcanoes and has a long history of eruptions.
No. It is a volcano. It was formed by a hot spot.
HOW MOUNT SHASTA WAS FORMED...It was built from repeated eruptions throughout the years,Mt. Shasta is in Sacramento and it a composite volcano.
That's a very good question.
A "hot spot" stays in the same place while the Earth's crust moves above it.
Hekla is a stratovolcano in Iceland, which is characterized by a steep cone shape and explosive eruptions. It is one of Iceland's most active volcanoes and has a long history of eruptions.
That's a very good question.
No. It is a volcano. It was formed by a hot spot.
HOW MOUNT SHASTA WAS FORMED...It was built from repeated eruptions throughout the years,Mt. Shasta is in Sacramento and it a composite volcano.
A hot spot is an area where extra hot mantle material wells up from deep inside the mantle, forming magma that can lead to the formation of volcanoes. An eruption is an event in which a volcano ejects ash, gas, or molten rock. Most volcanoes are not associated with hot spots.
An active volcano, such as in the Hawaiian islands, is a weak spot in the Earth's crust.
Yes. Stratovolcanoes can form over continental hot spots.
A shield volcano
Vesuvius is a explosive subduction volcano, not a hot spot volcano.
No. Kilauea is associated with a hot spot.