Because the lithospheric ocean plate moves with plate tectonics over the stationary mantle based hot spot, forming a series of volcanoes.
There are many islands that were built by volcanoes, commonly known as volcanic islands. Some examples include Hawaii, Iceland, and the Galapagos Islands. These islands were formed through volcanic activity, where magma rises to the surface and solidifies to create land masses.
The Pacific Ocean has many small scattered islands that were formed from the tips of extinct volcanoes. These types of islands are known as volcanic islands or seamounts and can be found throughout the Pacific's vast expanse.
Both shield volcanoes and stratovolcanoes can form islands.
None. The Bahamas are not volcanic. They are reef islands.
Well the islands can't sink it's impossible so it would most likely be volcanoes
It is not so much that volcanoes tend to occur on islands as much as many islands are formed by volcanoes. Subduction zones and hot spots often cause volcanoes to develop on the sea floor. Erupted material then piles up to form islands.
About 150 volcanoes in total. 60 are active.
200
There are approximately 1500 active volcanoes in the world, and many of them are located on islands. It is estimated that there are hundreds of volcanic islands globally, but the exact number can vary as new volcanic activity can create or alter islands over time.
80
There are many islands that were built by volcanoes, commonly known as volcanic islands. Some examples include Hawaii, Iceland, and the Galapagos Islands. These islands were formed through volcanic activity, where magma rises to the surface and solidifies to create land masses.
Both shield volcanoes and stratovolcanoes can form islands.
There are several hundred volcanoes that are in South America. Of those volcanoes, there are between 200 and 300 that are active.
The Pacific Ocean has many small scattered islands that were formed from the tips of extinct volcanoes. These types of islands are known as volcanic islands or seamounts and can be found throughout the Pacific's vast expanse.
None. The Bahamas are not volcanic. They are reef islands.
No. Islands are small bodies of land, whereas volcanoes have erupted to make new land.Sometimes, large volcanoes can cause new islands to emerge (like Hawaii, for example), but volcanoes and islands are two very different things.
Shield volcanoes