GEOLOGY

EARTH SCIENCE

EARTHQUAKES

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
A place above a mantle plume where melted rock can form a volcano is a
A
fissure
B
mantle plume
C
hotspot
D
volcano
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -A hot spot is an area on Earth over a mantle plume or an area under the rocky outer layer of Earth, called the crust, where magma is hotter than surrounding magma. The magma plume causes melting and thinning of the rocky crust and widespread volcanic activity.

Detailed explanation-2: -A frequently-used hypothesis suggests that hotspots form over exceptionally hot regions in the mantle, which is the hot, flowing layer of the Earth beneath the crust. Mantle rock in those extra-hot regions is more buoyant than the surrounding rocks, so it rises through the mantle and crust to erupt at the surface.

Detailed explanation-3: -Shield volcanoes form above mantle plumes, but can also form at other tectonic settings. Sea-floor volcanism can take place at divergent boundaries, mantle plumes and ocean-ocean-convergent boundaries.

Detailed explanation-4: -Volcanoes can also form above a column of superheated magma called a mantle plume. This may happen in areas that are distant from plate boundaries. It is also referred to as hot spot or intraplate volcanism.

Detailed explanation-5: -Mantle plumes can be emitted from the core-mantle boundary region to reach the Earth’s crust. Because of the lateral displacement of the tectonic plates at the surface, the mantle plumes can create a series of aligned hot-spot volcanoes.

There is 1 question to complete.