The reverse fault.
The mountains that are associated with convergent plate boundaries are mountain ranges or mountain belts. Examples of a mountain range is the Andes.
Vesuvius is associated with a convergent boundary between the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate.
All of them. For example: the earthquake of 2010 in Chile happened along a convergent fault while the 2010 earthquake in Haiti happened along a transform fault. Source: I am just a genius...
The three types of faults are normal, reverse, and strike-slip faults. Normal faults are associated with divergent plate boundaries, reverse faults with convergent plate boundaries, and strike-slip faults with transform plate boundaries.
The two convergent boundaries on the largest plate, the Pacific Plate, are the boundary with the North American Plate along the west coast of North America, and the boundary with the Philippine Sea Plate in the western Pacific Ocean.
A reverse fault is usually associated with convergent plate boundaries, where two plates are colliding and one is forced upward over the other. It is less common along divergent boundaries, where plates are moving away from each other.
The mountains that are associated with convergent plate boundaries are mountain ranges or mountain belts. Examples of a mountain range is the Andes.
A volcano is not a type of fault. Volcanoes can be found at convergent and divergent plate boundaries and away from plate boundaries at hot spots.
A volcano is not a type of fault. Volcanoes can be found at convergent and divergent plate boundaries and away from plate boundaries at hot spots.
Convergent
Vesuvius is associated with a convergent boundary between the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate.
No. A volcano is not a plate boundary. Most volcanoes on land are associated with convergent boundaries, but many are associated with divergent boundaries and others with hot spots.
Mountains are formed at convergent plate boundaries or also known as fault lines.
earthquakes indicate both convergent,divergent and transform fault plate boundaries
convergent oceanic oceanic
Yes, convergent plate boundaries involve the process of rifting where tectonic plates move apart, leading to the formation of new oceanic crust. This process typically occurs at divergent plate boundaries, such as mid-ocean ridges, rather than at convergent plate boundaries where plates collide or subduct.
All of them. For example: the earthquake of 2010 in Chile happened along a convergent fault while the 2010 earthquake in Haiti happened along a transform fault. Source: I am just a genius...