Yes, but no with each other. They can meet other plates.
Mount Kanaga is a stratovolcano that formed through a series of eruptions from the build-up of layers of lava, ash, and other volcanic materials over time. It is located on the Aleutian Islands in Alaska, part of the Ring of Fire where tectonic plates meet and subduction occurs, leading to volcanic activity.
Volcanic island arcs form at convergent boundaries where two oceanic plates meet. This is because as the two plates collide, one plate is subducted beneath the other, leading to the melting of the mantle and the formation of volcanic activity. Over time, these volcanic eruptions can build up to create a chain of volcanic islands.
The surface feature formed when two plates meet is known as a fault. In some cases mountains can also be formed when two plates collide.
mountains are formed through the movement of tectonic plates which form the earths crust, with the force from convection currents. as two plates move towards eachother, where they meet can be pushed up to form mountain ranges etc.
Volcanoes usually form where tectonic plates meet.
Hawaii
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these are the plates under the land and they are spins round and when they meet and they form the continents
Above where the earth's plates meet.
Where two tectonic plates meet
Yes, but no with each other. They can meet other plates.
it doesnt
volcanic mountains
Yes, faults are breaks in the Earth's crust where plates meet. These breaks allow movement to occur along the plate boundaries, resulting in earthquakes as the plates slide past each other.
When tectonic plates meet, they can either collide, move past each other, or move apart. Depending on the type of boundary, different geological features can form, such as earthquakes, mountain ranges, volcanoes, or ocean ridges. The interaction of plates is driven by the movement of the Earth's lithosphere.
it should form a underwater earthquake and causes a Tsunami