Volcanoes can form at convergent boundaries, divergent boundaries, and at hot spots away from any plate boundary.
A volcano formed by a rising plume of magma that is not located at a plate boundary.
It is not on a plate boundary but in the middle of a plate. Kilauea has formed over a hot spot.
Booty
A diverging is the type of plate boundary that the Hekla volcano formed. Hekla last erupted in 2000. It is located in Iceland. ADDED. Also called a "constructive" plate boundary, because the upwelling magma adds rock to the edges of the two plates.
spreading plate boundary
A volcano formed by a rising plume of magma that is not located at a plate boundary.
Subduction boundaries
It is not on a plate boundary but in the middle of a plate. Kilauea has formed over a hot spot.
Krakatoa was formed off of a convergent plate boundary which pushed the land up and made a volcano.
Galeras Volcano is formed along Nazca and South American plates. It is a convergent boundary and is oceanic-continental. If you need more info. Go to geology.com
It is not on a plate boundary but in the middle of a plate. Kilauea has formed over a hot spot.
it was a convergent of divergent because it is a stratovolcano
Booty
No, Teide is not formed on a convergent plate boundary. It is a volcano located on the island of Tenerife, which is part of the Canary Islands, formed by a hotspot beneath the Earth's crust, creating a volcanic hotspot.
The Yellowstone volcano is well withing the boundaries of the North American plate. It formed over a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
A diverging is the type of plate boundary that the Hekla volcano formed. Hekla last erupted in 2000. It is located in Iceland. ADDED. Also called a "constructive" plate boundary, because the upwelling magma adds rock to the edges of the two plates.
I am pretty sure it was formed from an underwater volcano but maybe you shouldn't trust me, I am only a kid and I am sort of guessing.