Plate tectonics, (inter-continental plate collision).
A lot of them but a common example are the Himalayas
Volcanoes and earthquakes are associated a continental plate boundary.
Convergent plate margins.
Convergent plate boundary.
Mountain range system.
Mountain ranges are created at convergent plate boundaries. That is where two plates, either ocean and continental or continental and continental come together.
The mountains that are associated with convergent plate boundaries are mountain ranges or mountain belts. Examples of a mountain range is the Andes.
The answer is mountain ranges
mountain ranges
Volcanoes and Mountain Ranges.
Some continental mountain ranges are usually associated with forming as a result of tectonic plate collisions or convergent boundaries. These processes involve the plates pushing against each other, leading to the uplift of the Earth's crust and the formation of mountain ranges. Examples include the Alps in Europe, the Andes in South America, and the Rocky Mountains in North America.
The Andes
continental drifts
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge was not the result of continental convergence. Instead, it is a divergent boundary where new oceanic crust is forming as tectonic plates move apart.
Africa does have mountain ranges. The mountain ranges run from the Dead Sea in Israel, which is not part of Africa, to Switzerland.
Subduction zones, trenches and volcanic islands: the boundary that is oceanic. Trenches and volcanic islands: an oceanic-continental boundary. Folded mountain ranges: a continental and continental collision.
Mountains are formed by tectonic plate movement, which can result in plates colliding, pulling apart, or sliding past each other. When plates collide, the immense pressure causes the earth's crust to be forced upward, forming mountain ranges. Additionally, volcanic activity can also contribute to the formation of mountains when lava and ash build up over time.
sierra Nevada, continental divide
Mountain ranges are created at convergent plate boundaries. That is where two plates, either ocean and continental or continental and continental come together.
Most of the large mountain ranges formed as a result of continental drift/collision, some of the smaller ranges were formed in other ways.
Both plates collide and lift upward, forming moutains or mountain ranges.
sierra Nevada, continental divide