Hot spots have generated all types of volcanoes but are most often. If you mean to ask about specific volcanoes, there are too many to count, so a few groups and notable volcanoes will be listed:
The volcanoes of Hawaii
The volcanoes of the Canary Islands
The Yellowstone supervolcano
The San Francisco volcanic complex (including Sunset Crater and the San Francisco Peaks)
The volcanoes of Iceland (associated with both a hot spot and a divergent plate boundary).
Not usually. Most volcanoes are located near plate boundaries, but some volcanoes at hot spots do form in the middle of plates. A few include the volcanoes of Hawaii, the volcano at Yellowstone, and the Volcanoes of the Canary Islands.
flood basalts and volcanoes
No. Hot spots and subduction zones are two separate geogolgic settings in which volcanoes can form. Some hot spots may develop as a result of activity in a subduction zone, and continue activity after subduction has ended or move away.
Shield volcanoes typically form on hot spots. These volcanoes have gentle slopes due to the low-viscosity basaltic lava they produce. Examples of shield volcanoes formed on hot spots include Mauna Loa in Hawaii and Galapagos Islands in Ecuador.
Yes I am pretty sure.
Which volcanoes are located at hot spots
Which volcanoes are located at hot spots
Areas where stray volcanoes are located are called 'Hot Spots' such as the volcanoes located on the Hawaian islands
They are located at divergent boundaries and hot spots.
Shield volcanoes are not hot spots but they are associated with them. However, such volcanoes can also form at rift zones.
Not just anywhere. Most volcanoes are located at plate boundaries. The rest are located at locations called hot spots.
Yes, it is not uncommon to find volcanoes at hot spots.
Not usually. Most volcanoes are located near plate boundaries, but some volcanoes at hot spots do form in the middle of plates. A few include the volcanoes of Hawaii, the volcano at Yellowstone, and the Volcanoes of the Canary Islands.
flood basalts and volcanoes
flood basalts and volcanoes
at hot spots(a place where volcanoes are very active)
No. Hot spots and subduction zones are two separate geogolgic settings in which volcanoes can form. Some hot spots may develop as a result of activity in a subduction zone, and continue activity after subduction has ended or move away.