Calderas can be occupied by lakes, but they do not have to be. Seomve calderas are dry while others are located beneath the sea.
Nobody dislikes aleandria calderas.
calderas
Calderas
Yellowstone National Park.
about 3
There are a few ancient Calderas in Texas. Texas isn't near any 'hotspots' or tectonic plate boundaries, so it's not volcanically active. The Calderas are in the western part of the state and are about 40 million years old or so... One in particular is the Buckhorn Caldera near Ft. Davis, Texas.
Calderas are typically larger than most impact craters, which are formed by meteorite impacts. Calderas are massive volcanic depressions that form when the ground collapses after a volcanic eruption depletes the magma chamber. The size of both structures can vary greatly, but calderas tend to be larger in scale.
both are natural holes in the ground. calderas are made by volcanoes ad craters are made by things that crash into Earth like meteors
No. Hot spots are located under many, but not most volcanoes. Many calderas are associated with subduction zones. When the ground in a caldera rises it is called a resurgent dome, not a hot spot.
When rock melts at calderas, it forms magma. This magma is then forced towards the Earth's crust as lava through volcanic eruptions.
calderas