yes
Mt. Fuji is located in Japan. It is near a continental convergent boundary, a continental transform boundary, and an oceanic transform boundary.
Mount Okmok is located near the Aleutian Trench in Alaska, which is associated with a convergent plate boundary. Specifically, it is located along the boundary between the Pacific plate and the North American plate. This tectonic setting makes it prone to volcanic activity due to the subduction of the Pacific plate beneath the North American plate.
Mt. Cleveland is a volcano caused by the convergent plate boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American plate. Don't trust me, I just wrote this so that you would actually RESEARCH instead of rely on our answers because I'm stupid.
Mt. Hood is an example of a convergent boundary, where the North American Plate is colliding with the Juan de Fuca Plate, leading to the formation of the Cascade Mountain Range.
Mount Pavlof in Alaska is located along the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate. The subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the North American Plate in this region leads to volcanic activity, resulting in the formation of Mount Pavlof.
Mt. Fuji is located in Japan. It is near a continental convergent boundary, a continental transform boundary, and an oceanic transform boundary.
Mt. Fuji is located in Japan. It is near a continental convergent boundary, a continental transform boundary, and an oceanic transform boundary.
Mt. Fuji is located in Japan. It is near a continental convergent boundary, a continental transform boundary, and an oceanic transform boundary.
It is a destructive plate boundary ;)
It is a composite cone volcano and is located near a destructive plate boundary where the African Plate is subducted beneath the Europian Plate.
A convergent plate boundary is responsible for creating the volcano Mount Rainier. This volcano is located in Washington, near Seattle.
It is on upper edge of the Pacific Plate.
Mount Rainier, Washington, isn't located on a divergent plate boundary but a convergent one. The Juan de Fuca Plate off the coast is pushing under the northern US and Canada, creating volcanism (such as Mt St Helens).
No. Kilauea and the other Hawaiian volcanoes are at a hot spot nowhere near any plate boundary.
mt Popocatépetl is a divergent plate boundary also known as a constructive boundary or an extensional boundary
Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary, it and the other Hawaiian volcanoes are the result of a hot spot.
Mount Tambora is associated with a convergent plate boundary.