Yes
No. Kilauea is on a hot spot.
Kilauea
No. Kilauea is associated with a hot spot.
Kilauea
Yes
Yes, Mount Kilauea is located on the Big Island of Hawaii and is a shield volcano that is associated with the Hawaiian hot spot. The hot spot is a source of underlying heat in the Earth's mantle that fuels volcanic activity in the region, resulting in the formation of Hawaiian Islands.
No. Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary. It is caused by a hot spot.
Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary, it and the other Hawaiian volcanoes are the result of a hot spot.
Kilauea is not located near a plate boundary. It is over a hot spot.
No. Kilauea, along with the rest of the Hawaiian volcanoes, is located on a hot spot.
The volcanoes of Hawaii, including Mauna Loa and Kilauea are associated with a hot spot.
Kilauea is a result of a hot spot, not subduction. It is located on the Big Island of Hawaii, which sits over a volcanic hot spot in the Earth's mantle. This hot spot produces magma that rises to the surface, causing the formation of volcanoes like Kilauea. In contrast, subduction involves one tectonic plate sliding beneath another, leading to different volcanic activity.