If two plates converge and one goes under the other (subduction), then volcanoes can form at the point where the bottom plate is furthest into the area under the top plate, but this is sort of on plate boundaries. If a hot spot (abnormally hot area in the mantle under the crust) is in the center of a plate, it can still send up magma and cause volcanoes. A great example of this is the Hawaiian islands, which are in the center of the Pacific plate.
Moun Cleveland formed as a result of a subduction zone, but is not a subduction zone in and of itself. A subduction zone is a feature that forms volcanoes, not a kind of volcano.
False. Hotspot volcanoes form above mantle plumes, which are localized upwellings of hot mantle material. Subduction zone volcanoes form due to the subduction of one tectonic plate beneath another, resulting in magma generation due to the melting of the subducted plate.
Composite or stratovolcanoes typically form along subduction zones. These volcanoes are characterized by their steep-sided profile, explosive eruptions due to the presence of viscous magma, and alternating layers of lava flows and volcanic ash. Subduction zones are where one tectonic plate slides beneath another plate, leading to magma formation and volcanic activity.
Volcan de Fuego is related to a subduction zone. It is located along the Ring of Fire in Central America, where the Cocos Plate is subducting beneath the Caribbean Plate. This subduction process generates the magma that fuels volcanic activity at Volcan de Fuego.
No, Mount Hood was formed through volcanic activity associated with the subduction of the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate beneath the North American plate. This type of volcanic activity is known as subduction zone volcanism, not hotspot volcanism.
Moun Cleveland formed as a result of a subduction zone, but is not a subduction zone in and of itself. A subduction zone is a feature that forms volcanoes, not a kind of volcano.
because iceland is one of the countries on the tectonic plate si itz part of a subduction zone :)
False. Hotspot volcanoes form above mantle plumes, which are localized upwellings of hot mantle material. Subduction zone volcanoes form due to the subduction of one tectonic plate beneath another, resulting in magma generation due to the melting of the subducted plate.
It is a subduction zone and can create earthquakes and volcanoes
Composite or stratovolcanoes typically form along subduction zones. These volcanoes are characterized by their steep-sided profile, explosive eruptions due to the presence of viscous magma, and alternating layers of lava flows and volcanic ash. Subduction zones are where one tectonic plate slides beneath another plate, leading to magma formation and volcanic activity.
Volcan de Fuego is related to a subduction zone. It is located along the Ring of Fire in Central America, where the Cocos Plate is subducting beneath the Caribbean Plate. This subduction process generates the magma that fuels volcanic activity at Volcan de Fuego.
Volcanoes are most commonly associated with the top plate in subduction zones.
Most volcanoes that cannot be ascribed either to a subduction zone or to a seafloor spreading at mid-ocean ridges are attributed to hot spots.
Composite volcanoes have subduction zone eruptions. Some of the most spectacular of volcanoes such as Krakatoa and Mt. St. Helen's have had this type of explosion.
No, Mt. Kilauea is not located on a subduction zone. It is a shield volcano located on the southeastern side of the Big Island of Hawaii, formed by a hotspot in the Earth's mantle, not by tectonic plate subduction.
No, Mount Hood was formed through volcanic activity associated with the subduction of the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate beneath the North American plate. This type of volcanic activity is known as subduction zone volcanism, not hotspot volcanism.
Indonesia has many volcanoes, not just one. Indonesia has volcanoes because it is located along a subduction zone, where a slab of oceanic crust is sinking under another plated and into the mantle. Water that the plate takes with it alters the chemistry of the mantle rock, causing some of it to melt and rise through the crust.