Japan formed as a result of a subduction zone.
Krakatoa 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
Volcan de Fuego is related to a subduction zone. It is located along the Ring of Fire in Central America, where the Cocos Plate is subducting beneath the Caribbean Plate. This subduction process generates the magma that fuels volcanic activity at Volcan de Fuego.
Close to a tectonic plate subduction zone, a tectonic spreading zone or a localised 'hot spot'.
Japan formed as a result of a subduction zone.
hot spot
Krakatoa is not associated with a hot spot. It is associated with a subduction zone.
Mount Fuji is not associated with a hot spot. It is associated with a subduction zone.
No. Stromboli is associated with a subduction zone.
yes, it is it is not a divergent or hot spot
Mount St. Helens is near a subduction zone.
Most volcanoes that cannot be ascribed either to a subduction zone or to a seafloor spreading at mid-ocean ridges are attributed to hot spots.
Volcan de Fuego is related to a subduction zone. It is located along the Ring of Fire in Central America, where the Cocos Plate is subducting beneath the Caribbean Plate. This subduction process generates the magma that fuels volcanic activity at Volcan de Fuego.
Close to a tectonic plate subduction zone, a tectonic spreading zone or a localised 'hot spot'.
No, like all Indonesian volcanoes it is a subduction zone volcano.
No, Mt. Kilauea is not located on a subduction zone. It is a shield volcano located on the southeastern side of the Big Island of Hawaii, formed by a hotspot in the Earth's mantle, not by tectonic plate subduction.