All active volcanoes ar on a hotspot, they have a magma chamber beneath them.
No
The most famous hot spot volcano is Hawaii as all the Hawaiian islands were formed by them.
Volcanoes are formed by the hotspot in the ground and turns it into a mountain which explodes.
Mount Adatara is associated with a convergent plate boundary, as are all of Japan's volcanoes.
All active volcanoes ar on a hotspot, they have a magma chamber beneath them.
hotspot volcanoes are formed away from the edge of plate boundaries. Plate boundary volcanoes are near a plate boundary
No, hotspot volcanoes do not occur along subduction zones. They occur when plates pass over mantle hot spots.
No
The most famous hot spot volcano is Hawaii as all the Hawaiian islands were formed by them.
Volcanoes are formed by the hotspot in the ground and turns it into a mountain which explodes.
When lava goes threw crust it forms a hotspot (valcano)
Mount Adatara is associated with a convergent plate boundary, as are all of Japan's volcanoes.
volcanoes takes place in two ways which are at the hotspot and at the point of weakness which are fault or crack
They usually exist on a hotspot. An example: Mauna Loa, Hawaii
Yes - volcanoes invariably have a hotspot beneath them - 'feeding' the crater with magma.
No. Singapore is located inside the plate and not near, and since volcanoes are usually found on the sides of the plate, there isn't. EDIT by Aeii (for better vocab and such) Singapore isn't near a plate boundary, where all the magma and crap come out of, so yeah, there's no volcanoes, cos' you need the "crap" to make volcanoes.^_^