a stratovolcano with caldera a stratovolcano with caldera
Mount Mazama is a volcano in the Cascade Range located in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. It is situated on the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where the Juan de Fuca Plate is being subducted beneath the North American Plate.
A volcano crater filled with water---CALDERA
Yes, Crater Lake is not a hot spot volcano. It was formed through caldera collapse following a massive eruption of Mount Mazama around 7,700 years ago. This type of volcano is known as a caldera volcano.
In the same way that the other mountains of the Cascade Range were formed. The Juan de Fuca Plate subducted under the North American Plate. The water that subducted with the Juan de Fuca Plate lowered the melting temperature of the rock above it, causing magma to form. The magma built up and rose, causing the formation of all the mountains in the Cascade Range.
Mt. Pinatubo is located near a convergent plate boundary, where the Eurasian Plate is subducting beneath the Philippine Sea Plate. This subduction zone is responsible for the volcanic activity in the region.
Mount Mazama is a volcano in the Cascade Range located in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. It is situated on the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where the Juan de Fuca Plate is being subducted beneath the North American Plate.
Yes. It is near a subduction sone.
Yes. Crater Lake is in the caldera of Mount Mazama, which formed as a result of the Cascadia Subduction Zone where the Juan de Fuca Plate collides with the North American Plate.
A volcano crater filled with water---CALDERA
Yes, Crater Lake is not a hot spot volcano. It was formed through caldera collapse following a massive eruption of Mount Mazama around 7,700 years ago. This type of volcano is known as a caldera volcano.
In the same way that the other mountains of the Cascade Range were formed. The Juan de Fuca Plate subducted under the North American Plate. The water that subducted with the Juan de Fuca Plate lowered the melting temperature of the rock above it, causing magma to form. The magma built up and rose, causing the formation of all the mountains in the Cascade Range.
Mt. Pinatubo is located near a convergent plate boundary, where the Eurasian Plate is subducting beneath the Philippine Sea Plate. This subduction zone is responsible for the volcanic activity in the region.
Mount Rainier, Washington, isn't located on a divergent plate boundary but a convergent one. The Juan de Fuca Plate off the coast is pushing under the northern US and Canada, creating volcanism (such as Mt St Helens).
Mount Bachelor is located near the western edge of the North American Plate in the Cascade Range. This region is primarily influenced by the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where the Juan de Fuca Plate is being subducted beneath the North American Plate. This makes Mount Bachelor part of a convergent plate boundary.
Wizard Island is part of the larger volcano Mount Mazama. A few thousand years ago Mount Mazama produced an enormous eruption and collapsed into a giant crater called a caldera. The caldera filled with water to form Crater Lake. Small eruptions that occurred later built up a cone of material that we call Wizard Island. Mount Mazama was formed as a result of a subduction zone along the west coast of North America. Here a section of the oceanic crust slides under the North American Plate and into the mantle, taking water with it. The water alters the chemistry of the hot rock in the mantle, causing some of it to melt. The molten rock has traveled upward and erupted to form a chain of volcanoes.
Mount Meakan is located on the Eurasian Plate.
mount Fuji lies on the Eurasian plate.