Mount Fuji is not associated with a hot spot. It is associated with a subduction zone.
The boundary of Mount Fuji is created by the subduction of the Pacific Plate underneath the North American Plate. This subduction has led to the formation of the volcanic arc that includes Mount Fuji.
no it was created when the eurasian plate and the pacific plate collided
No, Mount Fuji does not lie on a hot spot. It is part of the volcanic arc associated with the subduction of the Philippine Sea Plate beneath the Eurasian Plate. This tectonic activity, rather than a hot spot, contributes to its volcanic activity and formation. Hot spots are typically associated with volcanic islands like the Hawaiian Islands, which are formed by a different tectonic process.
yes, it is it is not a divergent or hot spot
Vesuvius is a explosive subduction volcano, not a hot spot volcano.
No. Mount Unzen, like the other volcanoes in Japan, was formed by a subduction zone.
Mount St. Helens is near a subduction zone.
Mount Vesuvius was formed by subduction. It is located at a convergent boundary where the African Plate subducts beneath the Eurasian Plate. The intense pressure and heat generated by this subduction process led to the formation of the volcano.
No, like all Indonesian volcanoes it is a subduction zone volcano.
convergent plate boundary
No. Mount Rainier, like the other cascade volcanoes, is associated with a subduction zone.