Mt. Fuji formed as two tectonic plates converged and subducted. Mt. Fuji is a stratovolcano (composite volcano) in Japan.
All of Japan was formed by volcanoes that came from under the ocean, so practically all of Japan's land includes some type of volcano but most are extinct (not active.)
Mt. Fuji is a volcanic cone. It was formed from repeated lava flows over a long period of time. It is believed that the mountain as it appears today was formed about 10,000 years ago.
Mt Fuji (Fujiyama) is an active volcano.
medemorphic rock.
Medemorphic
1,000,000 metres
12,389 ft or 3,778.6 m
Mount Fuji is a stratovolcano. However, its located at an island arc, Japan. Mount Fujis platonic environment is there for an island arc.
Mount Kosciuszko is made of granite rocks. It was formed in the Ordovician period and is 2228 meters tall at its highest point.
Yes the rocks that make up Mount Everest were formed on the bottom of the sea/ocean, this is proven by the fossils of sea creatures found at the summit. When the Indian subcontinent crashed into Asia this forced the rocks upwards to form the Himalayas which include Mount Everest.
Rocks are formed when magma cools.
Metamorphic rocks are naturally formed. they are formed from natural changes that happen to other rocks.
mount erebus formed by a vasting of rocks and earthly rocks when another volcano fused and well buitl together and made it it grew and grew for 4 years and that's how long it took to make the mountain the lava came from underground when rocks broke together and formed compounds.
Sedimentary rocks are formed from the earths surface when sediments hardens into rocks :]
Minerals are formed first then rocks
Extrusive igneous rocks are one type of rocks that can be formed above the ground. Sedimentary rocks can also be formed above the ground.
mount shasta was formed by when it exploded and formed land