None. Kilauea and all the Hawaiian volcanoes were created by a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
Their is no plate boundary that formed Mountian Kilauea it was a hot spot that forms it.
It is not on a plate boundary but in the middle of a plate. Kilauea has formed over a hot spot.
Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary, it and the other Hawaiian volcanoes are the result of a hot spot.
No. Kilauea is not associated with any plate boundary. It is associates with a hot spot under the Pacific Plate.
None. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific Plate, It is the result of a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
No. Kilauea was formed when the Pacific Plate moved over a hot spot in the Earth's mantle. Magma formed a plume upward into the Earth's crust and formed a volcano: Kilauea. 9 +10 = 21
It is not on a plate boundary but in the middle of a plate. Kilauea has formed over a hot spot.
It is not on a plate boundary but in the middle of a plate. Kilauea has formed over a hot spot.
Kilauea is not located near a plate boundary. It is over a hot spot.
Kilauea is on the Pacific Plate.
Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary, it and the other Hawaiian volcanoes are the result of a hot spot.
No. Kilauea is not associated with any plate boundary. It is associates with a hot spot under the Pacific Plate.
None. Kilauea is over a hot spot, far from the nearest plate boundary.
None. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific Plate, It is the result of a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
No. Kilauea was formed when the Pacific Plate moved over a hot spot in the Earth's mantle. Magma formed a plume upward into the Earth's crust and formed a volcano: Kilauea. 9 +10 = 21
Kilauea is not on a continent. It is in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and is located on the Pacific Plate.
Almost all volcanoes are located along plate boundaries. The exceptions are volcanoes like Kilauea, in Hawaii. Kilauea is not located near a plate boundary. Instead, it is formed by a mantle plume. Again, this type of volcano is much, much rarer than those that form at plate boundaries.
No. Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary. It is caused by a hot spot.