Generally (I think probably always), a mountain range develops at a convergent boundary.
Topographical features that can be found along convergent boundaries include mountain ranges, deep ocean trenches, and volcanic arcs. These features are a result of the intense tectonic forces that push plates together, causing them to collide or subduct beneath one another.
Plate boundaries are not found in volcanoes.Volcanoes occur along plate boundaries usually along convergent boundaries
Three features along crustal plate boundaries are earthquakes, volcanoes, and mountain ranges. Earthquakes occur due to the movement of tectonic plates, volcanoes form at convergent boundaries where plates collide, and mountain ranges are often found at convergent boundaries where plates push against each other.
convergent boundaries, divergent boundaries, transform boundaries and plate boundaries
convergent boundaries, divergent boundaries, transform boundaries and plate boundaries
convergent boundaries, divergent boundaries, transform boundaries and plate boundaries
convergent boundaries, divergent boundaries, transform boundaries and plate boundaries
Divergent boundaries are found along mid-ocean ridges, convergent boundaries are found at subduction zones and mountain ranges, and transform boundaries are found along fault lines like the San Andreas Fault in California.
No. Sea floor trenches are found at convergent boundaries. divergen boundaries form mid-ocean ridges.
A reverse fault is usually associated with convergent plate boundaries, where two plates are colliding and one is forced upward over the other. It is less common along divergent boundaries, where plates are moving away from each other.
Mountains.
Major mountain belts are commonly found along convergent plate boundaries, where two tectonic plates collide and force the crust to uplift and fold. This process results in the formation of large mountain ranges, such as the Himalayas and the Andes.