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convergent oceanic oceanic
Volcanic arcs form at plate subduction zones. Island arcs are volcanic islands that form over "hot spots" in the Earth's mantle. Because the islands are moving with the oceanic plate, they eventually are removed from the hot spot, forming a chain of islands in the direction of the plate movement.
Probably the pacific Plate. The permanent hot spots are revealed by chains of volcanic islands. The chain itself reveals the direction the plate is moving.
Volcanic arcs form at plate subduction zones. Island arcs are volcanic islands that form over "hot spots" in the Earth's mantle. Because the islands are moving with the oceanic plate, they eventually are removed from the hot spot, forming a chain of islands in the direction of the plate movement.
Mount Rainier is one of an enormous ring of volcanoes known as the Ring of Fire, which roughly encircles the Pacific Ocean in a horseshoe shape. More specifically, it is a member of the Cascade volcanic mountain range. The Cascade volcanoes are a chain of volcanoes running from Northern California in the United States of America to southern British Columbia, Canada fed by the subduction of the Juan de Fuca oceanic plate (which borders, but is distinct from the Pacific Plate by means of an oceanic ridge off the Pacific Coast) under the North American plate a few hundred miles to the west of the volcanoes.
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The Cascade mountain range is made up of a band of thousands of very small, short-lived volcanoes that have built a platform of lava and volcanic debris. The volcanoes were formed on a subduction zone where the Juan de Fuca oceanic plate plunges beneath the North American Plate. Magma was forced toward the Earth's surface to erupt, forming a chain of volcanoes - the Cascade Volcanic Arc - above the subduction zone.
convergent oceanic oceanic
Volcanic arcs form at plate subduction zones. Island arcs are volcanic islands that form over "hot spots" in the Earth's mantle. Because the islands are moving with the oceanic plate, they eventually are removed from the hot spot, forming a chain of islands in the direction of the plate movement.
Actually, it was a volcanic hotspot in the middle of the Pacific Plate that formed the island chain.
Volcanic arcs form at plate subduction zones. Island arcs are volcanic islands that form over "hot spots" in the Earth's mantle. Because the islands are moving with the oceanic plate, they eventually are removed from the hot spot, forming a chain of islands in the direction of the plate movement.
As the denser, heavier oceanic plate is forced under the lighter, more buoyant continental crust a volcanic mountain chain is usually formed - such as the Andes mountains, and the Cascadia volcanic range.
A volcanic arc is a chain of volcanoes which form in a curved shape. They are formed when a more dense oceanic plate collide with less a dense one.
A whopping 80 percent of those are located in Alaska's remote Aleutian Islands chain. The volcanic island chain, which stretches west from the mainland toward Kamchatka on the northwest Asian coast, is the result of the sinking of the Pacific plate beneath the North American plate
Probably the pacific Plate. The permanent hot spots are revealed by chains of volcanic islands. The chain itself reveals the direction the plate is moving.
Volcanic arcs form at plate subduction zones. Island arcs are volcanic islands that form over "hot spots" in the Earth's mantle. Because the islands are moving with the oceanic plate, they eventually are removed from the hot spot, forming a chain of islands in the direction of the plate movement.
The cascade range was formed by subduction which is the process by which one lithospheric plate is forced beneath another lithospheric plate, usually along a convergent plate boundary