It was formed on a hot spot
Mount St. Helens has an oceanic crust. It is part of the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where oceanic crust is being pushed beneath the North American tectonic plate.
It is not on a plate boundary. Therefore it may be on hotspot.
No. The Hawaiian islands are formed by a mantle plume.
Mount St Helens is a Composite Cone Volcano (meaning it is infrequent yet violent) and Kilauea is a Shield Volcano (meaning it is not violent). A shield volcano is widely spread between two continental crust though Kilauea is on a hot spot. Meaning it is in the middle of a plate. Composite Cone Volcanos are located between oceanic plates and continental crusts.
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 St. Helens has an oceanic crust. It is part of the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where oceanic crust is being pushed beneath the North American tectonic plate.
Mount St. Helens is located near a subduction zone. Here, the oceanic Juan de Fuca PLate is colliding with and sliding under the continental North American Plate.
It was formed from converget bounderies.
Below are the 3 types of plate boundaries, not collisions. I'm not sure myself what the correct answer is, but I know that this is incorrect.The three are divergent boundaries, convergent boundaries, and transform boundaries.The types of collisions are oceanic-oceanic which create Mt Pinatubi, oceanic-continental which create Mt. St. Helens, continental-continental which create the Himalayas, oceanic-oceanic which create the Ring of Fire and the transform boundary which is like the San Andreas Fault.
St Helens Rugby Football Club are a professional rugby league club from St Helens who play in the Super League. They were formed on the 19th of November 1873.
Volcanoes on land away from boundaries are known as continental hot spots. They are formed from rising igneous intrusions, known as mantle plumes. Unlike other volcanoes who form on boundaries (such as the Ring of Fire), continental hot spots need no boundaries. Since hot spots are stationary, and the continental plates are not, the plates move around and subject new parts of the plate to the hot spot. The only thing a land volcano needs is a hot spot. If a continent is experiencing rifting and has divergent boundaries, a volcano on land could also appear as igneous material rises. Continent-continent convergence is unlikely to produce land volcanoes. Continent-oceanic convergence and subduction could also produce volcanoes on the plate that sits above the subducted oceanic plate, which is where most land volcanoes form.
it was formed not built :) :) :) :)
Penis
In formed within the last 4000 year time period.
Convergent
It is not on a plate boundary. Therefore it may be on hotspot.
A "bulge" developed on the north side of Mount St. Helens as magma pushed up within the peak.