452
There are about 452 volcanoes in The Ring of Fire.
Many of the volcanoes around the Ring of Fire are stratovolcanoes.
a ring of volcanoes
The 'Ring of Fire' is actually the edge of the Pacific Plate. It is called the 'Ring of Fire' because it is a ring lined with lots and lots of volcanoes. If what you mean by belt is a mostly straight line, then no, it is a deformed and distorted ring, with many volcanoes out of line, but shaped like a strange circle. The 'Ring of Fire' is not a belt of fire at all. The fire is supposed to be lava! The fire comes from the volcanoes... as you may know! In shorter words, it is a circle of volcanoes that line the Pacific Plate.
The ring of fire is called the ring of fire. It is a chain of volcanoes in the pacific ocean.
The Ring of Fire
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.
that is known as the Ring of Fire. The Ring of Fire has many volcanoes and is an earthquake danger zone.
75% of 452. you do the math.
Many of them are, but not all. The Ring of Fire also includes some shield and cinder cone volcanoes. There are also several complex volcanoes that do not fit neatly into the three main categories.
The ring is the circle of countries that have volcanoes in it.
Because most volcanoes are around it.