This happens because the plates under the earths crust are always moving some times the plates crash into each other, this sometimes makes one plate sink under the other one and burning up, or pushing up.
volcanos mostly form on tectonic plate boundaries and hot stops
Yes. Most volcanoes on Earth are associated with plate boundaries.
Most volcanoes do form near colliding plate boundaries where subduction occurs, such as the Ring of Fire in the Pacific Ocean. However, volcanoes can also form in other geologic settings, such as hotspots and rift zones.
they are most likely to form were the plates of the earth are most active ... like Hawaii.
Most are found on converging
Most volcanoes form at either convergent or divergent plate boundaries. Volcanoes at convergent plate boundaries form when one plate slides under another, taking seawater with it. This causes the rock in the mantle to melt as the melting point drops. This new magma can rise to form volcanoes.At divergent plate boundaries the crust is thing, which lowers pressure on the mantle, causing some material to melt.
Most volcanoes are located along tectonic plate boundaries, particularly at convergent and divergent boundaries. At convergent boundaries, one plate subducts beneath another, leading to magma formation and volcanic activity. At divergent boundaries, plates pull apart, allowing magma to rise and create new crust, often resulting in volcanic eruptions. Additionally, some volcanoes, known as hotspot volcanoes, can form away from plate boundaries due to mantle plumes.
Most volcanoes appear at the tectonic plate boundaries where friction between the plates and the mantle makes magma which then push through near the plate boundaries forming volcanoes.
along plate boundaries
Most earthquakes occur on plate boundaries such as Japan and Chile and most volcanoes occur in diverging plate boundaries like Dallol and Iceland and the Pacific Ring of Fire like Ecuador and Indonesia
Volcanoes that form on converging plate boundaries are typically stratovolcanoes or composite volcanoes. These volcanoes are formed by the subduction of one tectonic plate beneath another, leading to the formation of a volcanic arc and explosive eruptions due to the melting of the subducted plate. Examples include the Cascade Range in the U.S. and the Andes in South America.
... Yes that is exactly where they form and the most dangerous volcanoes are formed in this area by wide opening, colliding plates.