
The volcanoes on the basis of plate boundaries (convergent/divergent/intraplate) it is associated with.
- a) Crater Lake
- b) Hawaii’s Kilauea
- c) Mount St. Helens
- d) East African Rift
- e) Yellowstone
- f) Mount Pelée
- g) Deccan Traps
- h) Fujiyuma

Answer to Problem 1GST
- a) Crater Lake – convergent plate boundary
- b) Hawaii’s Kilauea – intraplate volcanism
- c) Mount St. Helens – convergent plate boundary
- d) East African Rift – divergent plate boundary
- e) Yellowstone – intraplate volcanism
- f) Mount Pelée – convergent plate boundary
- g) Deccan Traps – intraplate volcanism
- h) Fujiyuma – convergent plate boundary
Explanation of Solution
Convergent plate boundary (destructive boundaries) – It is formed when two crustal plates move towards each other and collide. It has three different settings, when an ocean-continent subduction takes place; the denser oceanic plate slides beneath the continental plates to form subduction zones.
Examples: Andes and Cascade Mountains ranges.
When a continent-continent collision takes place, the subducting plate edges are compressed, folded, and pushed upwards forming orogenic belts or mountain ranges. Examples: Himalayas and Alps.
When ocean-ocean subduction takes place, the denser and older plates slide beneath the less-dense, new plates; this results in the formation of ocean trenches, earthquakes, and island arcs. Examples: Aleutian Islands, and the Japanese island arc.
Divergent plate boundary(Constructive plate boundaries) – They are formed when two lithospheres move away from each other. In case two oceanic lithospheres are drifting apart, a new ocean basin is formed by the seafloor spreading.
Example: Atlantic Ridge and East Pacific Rise
In case of a continent-continent rifting, a new ocean basin forms as the continent splits, spreads, the central rift collapses, and the ocean fills the basin. Example: East African Rift.
Intraplate volcanism (Hot-spot volcanism) - An intraplate volcanism occurs from enormous outpourings of fluid, basaltic lavas from the source deep within the Earth's core–mantle boundary, called mantle plumes; it remains in a fixed location relative to the moving tectonic plates. The surface manifestation of mantle plumes is termed as hot spot.
When an oceanic crust moves over a fixed mantle plume, it forms a chain of volcanic structure known as Hawaiian Islands.
If a large mantle plume ascends beneath a continental crust, it may result in vast outpourings of fluid basalts and form basalt plateaus such as Deccan plateau and Columbia plateau.
- a) Crater Lake – Crater lake, Oregon is formed when violent eruptions collapse the summit of a big composite volcano accompanying a disastrous ejection of silica-rich pyroclastic fragments which partially empties the magma chamber. The crater is then filled with rain and groundwater.
- b) Hawaii’s Kilauea – It is a shield volcano; the largest of the Hawaiian Islands formed from the mantle plume. Hence, it is a product of intraplate volcanism.
- c) Mount St. Helens – It is an active stratovolcano in Washington. This was created when the Juan de Fuca plate subducted beneath the North American plate, producing the line of volcanoes along the Cascade Mountain Range.
- d) East African Rift – It is an active continental rift zone in East Africa. It is a product of continent-continent rifting.
- e) Yellowstone – It is a volcanic caldera and super volcano in Yellowstone National Park in the Western United States. The source is Yellowstone hotspot.
- f) Mount Pelée – It is an active stratovolcano on the Caribbean island of Martinique. It is formed by the result of a subduction zone.
- g) Deccan Traps – The Deccan Traps are a large igneous province located on the Deccan Plateau of west-central India and are one of the largest volcanic features on Earth. They consist of multiple layers of solidified flood basalt.
- h) Fujiyuma – Mt Fuji is an active stratovolcano located on Honshu Island, Japan. The major source of it is said to be subduction of the Pacific Place beneath the Philippine Plate.
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Chapter 9 Solutions
Earth Science (14th Edition)
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