The Australian mainland doesn't have any active volcanoes at this time because it doesn't lie over any plate boundaries.
Also, it isn't over any hot spot in the mantle at the present time.
It has had volcanic activity in the past.
No. There are no active volcanoes on the Australian mainland.
There are no active cinder volcanoes on the Australian mainland or Tasmania. There is an active volcano on the remote offshore territory of Heard and McDonald Island.
There are no active volcanoes on the Australian mainland. Possibly the nearest active volcanoes to Warrnambool (on Victoria's southern coast) are Ruapehu in New Zealand and the volcano on Heard and McDonald Islands in the sourthen Indian Ocean.
Australia has never been affected by a volcanic eruption. There are no active or dormant volcanoes on the Australian mainland.
none, all Australian volcanoes are long extinct
Australia has no active volcanoes in any of its states or territories. Active volcanoes are found only on its distant, offshore territories.For thousands of years, the only active volcano on any Australian territory was Big Ben, which is located on Heard Island, an offshore territory thousands of kilometres from mainland Australia. More recently, there has been considerable volcanic activity on the nearby McDonald Islands, also Australian territory.
There aren't any on mainland Australia, but two exist near the remote Antarctic Territory [allocated to Australian jurisdiction]. There, on Heard and Mcdonald Islands, one exists on each island. Of the two active volcanos within the country's authority, Big Ben is located on Heard Island, an Australian"external territory" in the southern Indian ocean. Big Ben has erupted as recently as heard in 2001. Mawson Peak on McDonald Island is located 40 km to the west of Heard Island volcano, in the sub Antarctic and is the highest peak on Australian-owned territory. The island doubled in size between 1980 and 2001, due to volcanic activity.Hence, there are No active volcanoes within the Australian continent itself. Because there are no tectonic plate boundries running through Australia not many volcanos have formed.
There are several hundred volcanoes that are in South America. Of those volcanoes, there are between 200 and 300 that are active.
No. There are no volcanoes in or near Sydney. There are no active volcanoes on the mainland of Australia, and the closest Australia has to an active volcano is on Heard Island, an outlying territory of Australia in the southern Indian Ocean.
The only active volcano in mainland Europe is Mount Etna, located on the east coast of Sicily in Italy. It is one of the most active volcanoes in the world and has been erupting for thousands of years.
Pumice is volcanic rock. Italy probably has the most pumice, since it contains the only active volcanoes on mainland Europe (as well as some of the most dangerous). Iceland also has a large concentration of active volcanoes.
it has volcanoes, but none are active