Most volcanoes are not active but some are. It is very rare for a volcano to be active. :-)
All of the Hawaiian Islands are volcanic, but only Hawaii, the Big Island, has active volcanoes at this time.
Yes, they would. Hawaii is a prime example; all of its islands are either extinct or active volcanoes.
Most of the Hawaiian islands were formed by volcanic activity, but not all islands currently have active volcanoes. The Big Island of Hawaii is home to active volcanoes, while some of the other islands, such as Kauai and Oahu, have dormant or extinct volcanoes.
The region of the US with the most active volcanoes is Alaska, particularly along the Aleutian Islands and the Alaska Peninsula. This area is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire and is home to over 80% of all active volcanoes in the US.
not all are made of volcanic rock but those that are close to active volcanoes will most prob be built of volcanic rock :-)
All of the islands are volcanoes. Volcanoes are still active on the Big Island. The geology is basically basalt rock and lava. Sand on the beaches is not the ussual silica dioxide, but is calcium carbonate- from broken down coral.
All of it. The islands were created by volcanoes.
Asia has the most active volcanoes. The Ring of Fire passes through the islands of Indonesia, the Philippines and Japan and contains numerous volcanoes.
All of the active and inactive volcanoes that are part of the Hawaiian-Emperor Seamount chain are shield volcanoes. Shield volcanoes are the result of Hot Spot volcanism which is the type of volcanic force that created the Hawaiian islands.
They were all produced by volcanoes.
No, not all jovian planets have active volcanoes. For example, Jupiter and Saturn do not have active volcanoes. However, some of the moons that orbit these planets, such as Io (a moon of Jupiter), do have active volcanoes.