Hawaii
None. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific Plate, It is the result of a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
The Hawaiian islands are not the result of plate techtonics, they are the result of volcanic activity relating to a particular hot spot in the Earth's mantle, from which a plume of hot magma rises upward and causes volcanic eruptions.
Niether. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific plate, thousands of miles from the nearest plate boundary. The volcanic activty is due to a hot spot.
Mount Kilauea (in Hawaii) does not lie on a plate boundary. The Hawaiian volcanoes occur in the middle of an oceanic plate.This lead people to theorize that Hawaii must lie over a hot spot on the earth caused by some underlying mechanism. The concept of a mantle plume was developed to explain the Hawaiian hot spot, and the theory of mantle plumes has become something of a geological dogma. Recent research papers on the subject hotly contest the existence of mantle plumes and provide other mechanisms to explain hot spots. See the links below.
Actually, the Hawaiian Islands were not formed by plates colliding together. They are in fact in the middle of the Pacific plate. They were formed by a hot spot. A hot spot is a spot in the inside of a plate and magma rises up to the surface and becomes a volcano. The reason why there are multiple islands is because the Pacific Plate is moving. Once an island moves completely away from the hot spot it becomes an extinct volcano.
None. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific Plate, It is the result of a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
The Hawaiian islands are not the result of plate techtonics, they are the result of volcanic activity relating to a particular hot spot in the Earth's mantle, from which a plume of hot magma rises upward and causes volcanic eruptions.
None. Kilauea formed at a hot spot in the middle of the Pacific Plate.
Niether. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific plate, thousands of miles from the nearest plate boundary. The volcanic activty is due to a hot spot.
Mount Kilauea (in Hawaii) does not lie on a plate boundary. The Hawaiian volcanoes occur in the middle of an oceanic plate.This lead people to theorize that Hawaii must lie over a hot spot on the earth caused by some underlying mechanism. The concept of a mantle plume was developed to explain the Hawaiian hot spot, and the theory of mantle plumes has become something of a geological dogma. Recent research papers on the subject hotly contest the existence of mantle plumes and provide other mechanisms to explain hot spots. See the links below.
Kilauea, the volcano is on one plate, the pacific plate, and it is right in the middle. The only reason the Hawaiian archipelago is there is because of a hot spot. There is pressure in the middle of the plate which causes magma to shoot up out of the top even though it is nowhere near a plate boundary. The reason that volcanoes become dormant is because over the years, the pacific plate moves over the hot spot, causing new volcanoes to form, therefore forming the Hawaiian islands.
Actually, the Hawaiian Islands were not formed by plates colliding together. They are in fact in the middle of the Pacific plate. They were formed by a hot spot. A hot spot is a spot in the inside of a plate and magma rises up to the surface and becomes a volcano. The reason why there are multiple islands is because the Pacific Plate is moving. Once an island moves completely away from the hot spot it becomes an extinct volcano.
The Hawaiian islands were formed by a hot spot. A hot spot is an area where magma from deep within the mantle rises to the surface, creating volcanic activity. The Pacific Plate moving over the hot spot has created a chain of volcanic islands, with the oldest island in the northwest and the youngest in the southeast.
The Hawaiian Islands were formed by a hot spot in the middle of the Pacific Plate. Hot magma rises upward until it spills onto the sea floor, forming a hot spot.
There is a 'Hot-spot' in the mantle underneath the crust near the Hawaiian islands, it causes the magma to bubble up through fissures in the sea floor and eventually create new islands. this is how they were formed. for more info look at mantle convection.
Yes, Hawaii is not part of the Ring of Fire. The Ring of Fire is a horseshoe-shaped area in the Pacific Ocean with a high frequency of earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, while Hawaii is made up of volcanic islands formed by a hot spot in the middle of the Pacific Plate.
No. Kilauea is not associated with any plate boundary. It is associates with a hot spot under the Pacific Plate.