Yes, Mount Ruapehu in New Zealand is located on a volcanic hotspot. The North Island of New Zealand sits on the boundary of the Pacific Plate and the Indo-Australian Plate, causing volcanic activity in the region.
Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary, it and the other Hawaiian volcanoes are the result of a hot spot.
Mount Tambora is associated with a convergent plate boundary.
None. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific Plate, It is the result of a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
Mount Rainier, Washington, isn't located on a divergent plate boundary but a convergent one. The Juan de Fuca Plate off the coast is pushing under the northern US and Canada, creating volcanism (such as Mt St Helens).
Yes, Mount Ruapehu in New Zealand is located on a volcanic hotspot. The North Island of New Zealand sits on the boundary of the Pacific Plate and the Indo-Australian Plate, causing volcanic activity in the region.
A sub-duction zone.
It is a destructive plate boundary ;)
mt Popocatépetl is a divergent plate boundary also known as a constructive boundary or an extensional boundary
Mt. Fuji is located in Japan. It is near a continental convergent boundary, a continental transform boundary, and an oceanic transform boundary.
Kilauea is not associated with a plate boundary, it and the other Hawaiian volcanoes are the result of a hot spot.
Mount Tambora is associated with a convergent plate boundary.
Mt. Ruapehu is located in the south end of New Zealend .
Mount Vesuvius is on a Convergent Plate Boundary.
None. Kilauea is in the middle of the Pacific Plate, It is the result of a hot spot rather than a plate boundary.
divergent
Eurasian and african