Earthquakes or the volcano itself
Everytime a volcano erupts, the magma gets higher and higher everytime it hardens. This causes an island arc
No, Redoubt Volcano is not part of an island arc. It is located in the Aleutian Range in Alaska and is associated with the Aleutian volcanic arc, which is a chain of volcanoes formed by the subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the North American Plate.
No. Mount Rainier is on the mainland, so it is part of a continental arc.
The island-arc volcanoes are formed from the subduction of an oceanic tectonic plate under another tectonic plate, and often parallel an oceanic trench.
A trench and a island arc
Everytime a volcano erupts, the magma gets higher and higher everytime it hardens. This causes an island arc
you can find an island arc in the Philippines islands
Mount Fuji is a stratovolcano. However, its located at an island arc, Japan. Mount Fujis platonic environment is there for an island arc.
No, Redoubt Volcano is not part of an island arc. It is located in the Aleutian Range in Alaska and is associated with the Aleutian volcanic arc, which is a chain of volcanoes formed by the subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the North American Plate.
and island arc is formed by undersea volcanoes. built over time, and island arc is made of basalt and melted rock from the mantle.
yes
farts
movement of plate tectonics move the island into an arc.
No. Mount Rainier is on the mainland, so it is part of a continental arc.
A volcano. Also, when the crust moves, or plate tectonics happens, ( which causes the oceans floor to move ) it makes an island arc... Which is a claim of volcanoes. Hawaii is an example of an island arc. The island of Hawaii is still forming because it is still over the hot spot. The other islands in Hawaii were made by the same hot spot.
A newly formed land consisting of an arc-shaped island chain is called a volcanic island arc. These volcanic islands are typically formed due to the convergence of tectonic plates where one plate subducts beneath another, leading to magma rising to the surface and creating a chain of volcanic islands.
The Aleutian Islands.