Yes Mount Mazama is part of the ring of fire, as are all the volcanoes of the U.S. Pacific Coast.
No. Mount Mazama is associated with a subduction zone, which is formed by converging plates.
Volcanic eruptions in the Ring of Fire are generally violent, though not all eruptions are. Kilauea is an example of a volcano that has relatively quiet eruptions, but it is a deep mantle hotspot volcano not part of the ring of fire system and its lava is low in water content. In general the volcanoes in the Ring of Fire that have violent eruptions including Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Pinatubo, Krakatoa, and Mt. Mazama because their lava is high in water content which increases the possibility of steam explosions during an eruption.
Yes. Mount Adams is part of the ring of fire, as are all the volcanoes of the U.S. Pacific Coast.
It will probaly be destroyed, like everything else.
No. Mount Vesuvius is in the Mediterranean. The Ring of Fire borders the Pacific.
Mt. Mazama is 8,159 ft.
Mt. Mazama is in present day United States, Oregon. Crater lake is at the top
Mt. Mazama is a composite cone or sometimes called a strato volcano
it got its name after the Mazama mountain cub
No. Mount Mazama is associated with a subduction zone, which is formed by converging plates.
yes
Yes it is.
Composite Volcano (stratovolcano).
I think this volcano is active.
No. Mount Mazama still exists. Between 6,000 and 8,000 years ago Mount Mazama underwent a cataclysmic eruption and much of the mountain collapsed.
Mount Pelee is not on the Ring of Fire. The Ring of Fire is along the Pacific Rim. Mount Pelee is in the eastern Caribbean.
No. Mount Etna is in the Mediterranean, while the Ring of Fire encircles the Pacific.