The Himalayas, a mountain range at the northern edge of the India plate
mountains
a subduction zone forms
A convergent boundary forms land features such as mountain ranges, volcanoes, and trenches due to the collision of tectonic plates. The collision can cause one plate to be forced beneath the other in a process known as subduction, leading to the formation of these geographical features.
convergent boudary
A characteristic is a feature that has different forms in a population
A mountain range typically forms along two convergent plates as they collide and push against each other, causing the land to uplift and form peaks. The Himalayas, for example, were created by the collision of the Indian Plate with the Eurasian Plate.
A rift valley forms at a convergent boundary.
basalt
convergent boudary
Extreme mountain ranges
Oceanic-continental convergent boundary: Where oceanic plates subduct beneath continental plates, creating deep ocean trenches and volcanic arcs on the overriding plate. Continental-continental convergent boundary: Where two continental plates collide, causing intense folding and faulting to create mountain ranges. An example is the collision of the Indian Plate with the Eurasian Plate, forming the Himalayas.
It's homoplasy.