The Yellowstone caldera is associated with a hot spot, not a plate boundary.
The famous caldera volcano in Wyoming is Yellowstone Caldera, located within Yellowstone National Park. It is one of the largest active volcanic systems in the world and is known for its geothermal features like geysers and hot springs.
Wyoming is not considered a volcanic hot spot like areas such as Hawaii or Yellowstone. However, the state does have some past volcanic activity, such as within Yellowstone National Park where the Yellowstone Caldera is located. This caldera is an active supervolcano hotspot.
Yellowstone Caldera in Yellowstone National Park is a famous example of a caldera volcano. It has erupted catastrophically in the past, creating a large caldera that measures about 45 by 30 miles.
No. Most of Yellowstone lies outside of the Yellowstone Caldera, though this caldera still takes up a large portion of the park. A larger portion of the park is in the older Island Park Caldera, which partly overlaps the Yellowstone Caldera. This still takes up a minority of the park.
No. For one thing, the Yellowstone volcano is not a mountain, it is a caldera. It is usually referred to as the Yellowstone caldera or the Yellowstone supervolcano.
The Yellowstone caldera.
An eruption of the Yellowstone caldera occurs it will likely be an extinction level event.
The Yellowstone Caldera, also known as the Yellowstone Supervolcano, is a volcanic caldera and supervolcano estimated to be an area of about 34 X 45 miles (55 X 72 km).
No. Most of Yellowstone is outside of the caldera.
Yellowstone Caldera
Yellowstone Caldera, Yellowstone National Park, USA