No. The ring of fire is not a volcano. It is the area around the edge of the Pacific Ocean that experiences unusually high volcanic activity.
Mount Vesuvius is a volcano that was created by the convergence of two tectonic plates. It is a composite volcano composed of a variety of different layers.
A composite volcano is composed after many eruptions. The ring of fire is a horse shaped area of volcanic activity containing over 75 percent of the world's most active volcanoes.
Nothing causes the ring of fire it is just a nick name for the area because volcano's and earthquakes have magma and lava involved.
The Ring of Fire is not a volcano. It is a chain of hundreds of volcanoes surrounding the Pacific Ocean on Earth.
No, it is a ring of volcanoes.
The ring of fire is a group of volcano's surrounding the pacific. Volcano's are formed by 2 continental plates colliding and a magma chamber was under neath. It is named ring of fire because it is a ring of volcano's.
The Ring of Fire has nearly 500 volcanoes.
the ring of fire is volcano belt that rims the Pacific Ocean
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Well in Science definition the Ring of Fire is a volcano belt that rims the Pacific Ocean.
Many of the volcanoes around the Ring of Fire are stratovolcanoes.