yes it is on the ring of fire
Yes, Mount Merapi is located on the Ring of Fire. The Ring of Fire is a horseshoe-shaped zone in the Pacific Ocean known for its high seismic and volcanic activity, and Mount Merapi is one of the many active volcanoes located along this zone in Indonesia.
Novarupta is part of the Ring of Fire. However, it is not known as Mount Noverupta as it has not yet formed a mountain.
No, Mount Nyiragongo is not in the Ring of Fire. It is located in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Ring of Fire is a region in the Pacific Ocean known for frequent earthquakes and volcanic activity.
No. Mount Vesuvius is in the Mediterranean. The Ring of Fire borders the Pacific.
Not just near. Mount St. Helens is part of the Ring of Fire.
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.
Yes, Mount Merapi is located on the Ring of Fire. The Ring of Fire is a horseshoe-shaped zone in the Pacific Ocean known for its high seismic and volcanic activity, and Mount Merapi is one of the many active volcanoes located along this zone in Indonesia.
Novarupta is part of the Ring of Fire. However, it is not known as Mount Noverupta as it has not yet formed a mountain.
No, Mount Nyiragongo is not in the Ring of Fire. It is located in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Ring of Fire is a region in the Pacific Ocean known for frequent earthquakes and volcanic activity.
yes mount Fuji is on the ring of fire
No. Mount Vesuvius is in the Mediterranean. The Ring of Fire borders the Pacific.
No. It is in Italy and the "ring of fire" is located in the Pacific.
Not just near. Mount St. Helens is part of the Ring of Fire.
No.
Yes it is in fact it is one of the most deadliest volcano on earth.
Mount Pelée is not a cinder cone volcano; it is a stratovolcano. Stratovolcanoes are tall, symmetrical cones built up by many layers of hardened lava, tephra, pumice, and volcanic ash. In contrast, cinder cone volcanoes are much smaller, steep-sided, and typically formed from a single eruption or a series of explosive eruptions that eject mostly cinders and ash.
yes.