More likely than where? please make your questions unambiguous.
In general the east side of the US is less likely to have earthquakes and volcanoes as compared to the west side.
· Burlington, North Carolina · Cary, North Carolina · Durham, North Carolina · High Point, North Carolina · Kitty Hawk, North Carolina · Morgantown, North Carolina · Oxford, North Carolina · Salisbury, North Carolina · Wilmington, North Carolina
Western and southern Mexico qualify as such. The region is located on the subduction zone between the North American, Pacific and Cocos tectonic plates. It is also known as part of the "Ring of Fire" with plenty of volcanoes and prone to earthquakes.
LOL from worksheet 2.3 Geography?Answer:Volcanoes and earthquakes often happen near eachother.They occur in narrow belts across the Earth's surface.Most volcanoes and Earthquakes lie along plate boundries.Hope this helped! - Hamza.
Indian Trail is a town in North Carolina. There are no cities in North Carolina that begin with the letter i.
NC state North Carolina
No there are no volcanoes in North Carolina.
no
There are- but the earthquakes that happen are so small that you probably cant even feel them.
The Pacific plate is sliding past the North American plate.Both move in same direction, but the Pacific plate is moving faster.The result is earthquakes now and then-but no volcanoes.
Earthquakes Tornados Floods Hurricanes
Truly I do not know the question but you spelled north in north carolina wrong so I would change that. But the answer is yes there was a earthquake in North Carolina in the 1990's in Charlotte.
Tornadoes appear to be most common in the eastern and central portions of North Carolina.
This is where the fault lines of the North American and Pacific plate meet, an areas where there is lots of earthquakes, tsunamis (caused by quakes) and volcanoes. Underneath these cracks in the Earth is magma (lava inside the earth), every once in a while, this magma will come to the surface and form volcanoes. and that is basically itUser:Hectoria29
Yes, but they are rare here, and not very strong. Usually centered in the mountains of the western part of the state.
· Burlington, North Carolina · Cary, North Carolina · Durham, North Carolina · High Point, North Carolina · Kitty Hawk, North Carolina · Morgantown, North Carolina · Oxford, North Carolina · Salisbury, North Carolina · Wilmington, North Carolina
Yes, but they are rare here, and not very strong. Usually centered in the mountains of the western part of the state.
North Carolina is north of South Carolina