A hotspot is not a plate boundary, so the answer would be "none of the above".
It is not on a plate boundary. Therefore it may be on hotspot.
Mount Adatara is associated with a convergent plate boundary, as are all of Japan's volcanoes.
No, Mauna Loa is not located on a transform boundary. It is a shield volcano located on the Big Island of Hawaii and is primarily formed by hotspot volcanism, where magma rises from deep within the Earth's mantle.
Mauna Kea is a convergent boundary. You're welcome. ;)
Yes, Hawaii is not located on a divergent boundary. The Hawaiian Islands were formed due to a hotspot, where a tectonic plate moves over a stationary mantle plume, creating a chain of volcanic islands.
It is not on a plate boundary. Therefore it may be on hotspot.
No, Teide is not formed on a convergent plate boundary. It is a volcano located on the island of Tenerife, which is part of the Canary Islands, formed by a hotspot beneath the Earth's crust, creating a volcanic hotspot.
Divergent, since when the plates split, magma reaches the surface. Convergent, since it is where volcanoes are typically formed. Transform, since trough any crack magma can come out too.
Mount Adatara is associated with a convergent plate boundary, as are all of Japan's volcanoes.
No, Mauna Loa is not located on a transform boundary. It is a shield volcano located on the Big Island of Hawaii and is primarily formed by hotspot volcanism, where magma rises from deep within the Earth's mantle.
No. Mount Pelee is associated with a convergent plate boundary.
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Mauna Kea is a convergent boundary. You're welcome. ;)
Yes, Hawaii is not located on a divergent boundary. The Hawaiian Islands were formed due to a hotspot, where a tectonic plate moves over a stationary mantle plume, creating a chain of volcanic islands.
It's not on a boundary. It's on a hotspot, similar to Hawaii.
There are three types of boundaries: 1. Convergent 2. Divergent 3. Transform There are two types of plates: 1. Continental 2. Oceanic Volcanoes only form along convergent and divergent plate boundaries. To be exact, they only form along continental-oceanic convergent boundary, as well as oceanic-oceanic and continental-continental boundaries. At convergent boundaries, volcanoes are formed because of melting crust of the subduction plate (the oceanic plate subducting under the continental plate). They then seep out of the ground as subduction volcanoes. At divergent boundaries, volcanoes are formed because magma rise to the surface to fill the gap where the plates move apart. A third type of volcano that can form is a hotspot volcano. There exists a spot in the ground where magma is continuously rising. However, plates move so as the plates move, the volcanoes move with them. Hence, new volcanoes are formed and this creates a chain of volcanoes, such as Hawaii. Hope this helps! Sharon, 12th grade Geography student
No. Kilauea was formed when the Pacific Plate moved over a hot spot in the Earth's mantle. Magma formed a plume upward into the Earth's crust and formed a volcano: Kilauea. 9 +10 = 21