Earthquakes?
Or an angry wife.
Most volcanoes on land are caused by the Earth's plates moving toward each other, a process known as convergent plate boundary. When two plates converge, the denser oceanic plate subducts beneath the less dense continental plate, leading to the formation of volcanoes along the subduction zone.
convergant plate boundries
Yes, but no with each other. They can meet other plates.
Tectonic plates are the plates that move underground and cause volcanoes - I hope this answers your question. Z
joining two segments of a mid-ocean ridge
all volcanoes are caused by the earths plates moving toward each other and that is called convergent boundaries.
They are the contact points between plates that are moving toward each other.
Most volcanoes on land are caused by the Earth's plates moving toward each other, a process known as convergent plate boundary. When two plates converge, the denser oceanic plate subducts beneath the less dense continental plate, leading to the formation of volcanoes along the subduction zone.
This is called a convergent boundary. A divergent boundary is when plate move away from each other, and a transform boundary is when plates slide past each other.
Divergent plates are found in places where the tectonic plates are moving away from each other.
When tectonic plates move toward each other, it is known as a convergent boundary. This movement can result in subduction, where one plate is forced beneath the other, or in the collision of two plates, leading to the formation of mountain ranges.
Convergent boundaries (plates moving toward each other, also called destructive boundaries), divergent boundaries (plates moving away from each other (sometimes called constructive boundaries), fault lines (sideways movement).
Plates that move toasted each other are detractive plates meeting at a destructive margin. If a continental and an oceanic plate move towards each other, earthquakes and volcanoes occur, this is called a subduction margin, but if the plates are both continental then fold mountains form this is a collision margin
When two plate boundaries are moving toward each other, it is called a convergent boundary. This can lead to subduction, where one plate is forced beneath the other, or collision, where the two plates create mountain ranges.
Rift Zone
convergant plate boundries
Yes, but no with each other. They can meet other plates.