Moun Cleveland formed as a result of a subduction zone, but is not a subduction zone in and of itself.
A subduction zone is a feature that forms volcanoes, not a kind of volcano.
No. Mount Etna is associated with a subduction zone.
yes, it is it is not a divergent or hot spot
Mount Pinatubo is on a destructive plate boundary; it is above a subduction zone
Mount St. Helens was formed along a subduction zone. The volcano is part of the Cascade Range in the Pacific Northwest of the United States, where the Juan de Fuca plate is being subducted beneath the North American plate, leading to volcanic activity in the region.
Mount Shasta does not have a subduction zone directly beneath it; however, it is part of the Cascade Range, which is influenced by the subduction of the Juan de Fuca Plate beneath the North American Plate. This subduction process is responsible for the volcanic activity in the region, including the formation of Mount Shasta itself. The volcanic activity results from the melting of the subducting plate, leading to the generation of magma that feeds the volcano.
No. Mount Etna is associated with a subduction zone.
No. Mount Rainier is near a subduction zone.
Mount St. Helens is near a subduction zone.
Mount Fuji is not associated with a hot spot. It is associated with a subduction zone.
yes, it is it is not a divergent or hot spot
Mount Pinatubo is on a destructive plate boundary; it is above a subduction zone
No. Mount Unzen, like the other volcanoes in Japan, was formed by a subduction zone.
Mount St. Helens was formed along a subduction zone. The volcano is part of the Cascade Range in the Pacific Northwest of the United States, where the Juan de Fuca plate is being subducted beneath the North American plate, leading to volcanic activity in the region.
Mount Shasta does not have a subduction zone directly beneath it; however, it is part of the Cascade Range, which is influenced by the subduction of the Juan de Fuca Plate beneath the North American Plate. This subduction process is responsible for the volcanic activity in the region, including the formation of Mount Shasta itself. The volcanic activity results from the melting of the subducting plate, leading to the generation of magma that feeds the volcano.
Convergent plate boundary, more specifically a subduction zone.
No, Mount Hood was formed through volcanic activity associated with the subduction of the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate beneath the North American plate. This type of volcanic activity is known as subduction zone volcanism, not hotspot volcanism.
No, like all Indonesian volcanoes it is a subduction zone volcano.