Australia is the only continent without any active volcanoes. Though some remnants of old volcanoes can be found in Australia, they are no longer active.
I suppose this could be Australia, but it is near New Guinea which has had several earthquakes in the past few decades. Another option is Greenland or Antarctica (yes I'm aware that Greenland isn't a continent). Antarctica has a volcano or two but no earthquakes. While Greenland has no earthquakes and (as far as I know) no volcanoes.
Eyjafjallajökull is a mountain in Iceland that consists of a volcano covered by an ice-cap or glacier. It was much in the international news in April and May 2010 because it underwent a large eruption that disrupted air travel over the north Atlantic and much of Europe. Eyjafjallajökull is not a continent. Eyjafjallajökull is not on any continent, it is on a mid-ocean ridge.
The adjective is volcanic. It means of or like a volcano, or an erupting volcano.
The noun 'Mayon Volcano' is a proper noun, the name of a specific volcano. A proper noun is always capitalized. Examples of common nouns for the proper noun 'Mayon Volcano' are: volcano mountain landform feature
a volcano that is on the land of a continent
Mexico, and it is a volcano,in the continent of north America
One example of a volcano located in the middle of a continent is Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa. It is a dormant volcano and is the highest peak in Africa.
north america
Yes.
Mt Erebus is an active volcano on the Antarctic continent.
Mount Nyarmuragira
north america
Arenal, Costa Rica!
No. Mount Hood is a volcano. However, it is located on the continent of North America.
Mount Kilimanjaro is a snow-covered dormant volcano in the country of Tanzania on the continent of Africa. The other snow-covered dormant volcano on the African continent is Mount Kenya, in the country of Kenya, to the north of Tanzania.
Kilauea is not on a continent. It is in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and is located on the Pacific Plate.