mount aso is a ocianic plate boundry as it is near enough in sea water and it full of it but does no sit on sea water mount aso is on land but through the middle of the volcano is underwater. any questions :)
Mount Oyama is located in Japan. It is a convergent boundary. It is also said to be in the Pacific Ring of Fire.
It does not lie on a plate boundary but it lies near where the Pacific plate, Philippine plate and Eurasian plate meet. Which would make Japan a convergent boundary
no japan is located next to an oceanic plate that is being subducted beneath japan. this is a convergent plate boundary.
Convergent!
It is called a divergent plate boundary.
A transform boundary.
as the plates move towards each other the denser plate subducts into the asthenphere
the direction divergent boundaries move from is away from each other.
A convergent plate boundary is where one of the plates is sinking beneath another, and the other one is being pushed on top of the subducting plate. This is called a subduction zone. This happens when denser, heavier oceanic crust meets less dense, thicker, continental crust.When two plates converge, and one is less dense, that plate goes under the more dense plate into the mantle, this is called subduction.subduction will happen and a volcano will be formed. when one plate slides beneath another one magma from earths mantle is being pushed up on earths surface.
the plate boundary at the mount is a colliding plate boundary
eruasion plate
destructive plate boundary
mount etna is on asubduction plate boundary under the african and eurasian plate
Mount Pinatubo is on a destructive plate boundary; it is above a subduction zone
African plate
destructive plate boundary
The type of plate boundary creating Mount Usu is a convergent plate boundary. This supervolcano has erupted four times since 1900.
It was formed from the volcanism created by a subducting oceanic plate at a convergent plate boundary.
None. Mount Tabora is not creating a boundary. It was created by a convergent plate boundary.
no divergent boundary
Mount Oyama is a composite volcano.