It is not on a plate boundary. Therefore it may be on hotspot.
Mount Merapi is near a convergent plate boundary where the Indo-Australian Plate subducts beneath the Eurasian Plate.
No, Mount Cameroon is not on a divergent plate boundary. It is located on the African Plate near the boundary with the smaller Oku Plate to the northwest.
Mount Pinatubo is on a destructive plate boundary; it is above a subduction zone
Yes, Mount Etna is located on the boundary of the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate in Sicily, Italy. This makes it one of the most geologically active regions in Europe due to the tectonic activity along the fault line.
No. Mount Pelee is associated with a convergent plate boundary.
It is not on a plate boundary. Therefore it may be on hotspot.
It isn't on a plate boundary. It's on a hotspot.
It's not on a boundary. It's on a hotspot, similar to Hawaii.
Mount Merapi is near a convergent plate boundary where the Indo-Australian Plate subducts beneath the Eurasian Plate.
No, Mount Cameroon is not on a divergent plate boundary. It is located on the African Plate near the boundary with the smaller Oku Plate to the northwest.
mount etna is on asubduction plate boundary under the african and eurasian plate
Mount Pinatubo is on a destructive plate boundary; it is above a subduction zone
Hotspot volcanoes form over a fixed hotspot in the mantle, resulting in a chain of volcanoes as the tectonic plate moves over it, like the Hawaiian Islands. Volcanoes at plate boundaries are formed by the interaction of tectonic plates, where one plate is forced under another (subduction) or plates move apart (divergence), creating volcanic activity along the boundary, like the Ring of Fire.
African plate
Yes, Mount Etna is located on the boundary of the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate in Sicily, Italy. This makes it one of the most geologically active regions in Europe due to the tectonic activity along the fault line.
The Hawaiian Islands are located over a hotspot, where a tectonic plate moves over a stationary mantle plume. This is not a plate boundary, but rather a volcanic hotspot chain that has formed the Hawaiian Islands as the Pacific Plate moves slowly over it.