Yes. It is believed to have erupted in 2010 twice because of the constructive margin. The plates were pulled apart by convection currents then because of this basalt lava seeps in to form a new crust beneath the sea and existing volcano. Much of the magma was intruded as dolerite dykes (thin sheets of igneous rock.) New lava and dykes then added extra crust at each side of the spreading ridge.
a divergent boundry hot spot the north part of the atlantic plate and between the eurasian plate
-divergent boundry -convergent boundry -transforming boundry
Yes. Eyjafjallajokull is located in Iceland and is situated on or very near the Mid-Atlantic-Ridge which is a divergent plate boundary.
Eyjafjallajokull is located in Iceland on the Mid-Atlantic-Ridge which separates the North American and Eurasian plates.
Transform Boundary
a divergent boundry hot spot the north part of the atlantic plate and between the eurasian plate
-divergent boundry -convergent boundry -transforming boundry
A convergent boundry is creating the shiveluch volcano in Russia. The Eurasian plate collides with the Pacific plate
Yes. Eyjafjallajokull is located in Iceland and is situated on or very near the Mid-Atlantic-Ridge which is a divergent plate boundary.
The Nubian/African boundry and the Somalian boundry
A destructive plate boundary :)
Eyjafjallajokull is on 2 plate boundaries, and these boundaries are moving apart, so plate movements have caused this Icelandic volcano to erupt increasingly.
transformation boundries
The San Andreas fault -- the boundary between the Pacific and North American plates
it is on a convergent plate boundry
Eyjafjallajokull is located in Iceland on the Mid-Atlantic-Ridge which separates the North American and Eurasian plates.
Transform Boundary