hmm... probably...
1. They are both tall
2. They both form at convergent plate boundaries
3. They both lie on plate boundaries ( could be active ones )
yep, thats all i can think of. Hope this help :)
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Mountains and volcanoes both involve the movement of the Earth's crust. They are both formed by geological processes that shape the Earth's surface. Additionally, both mountains and volcanoes can have peaks or summits that rise above the surrounding landscape.
A volcano is a mountain except a volcano is on a hot spot which is why it is called a volcano but it is the same thing.
No, not all mountains are formed by volcanoes. Mountains can also be formed by tectonic plate movement, erosion, and uplift. Volcanic mountains are created when magma from the earth's mantle rises to the surface through volcanic activity.
because large continents are bigger so that means more mountains and some mountains are volcanoes.
Some examples of dormant volcanoes that are actually mountains include Mount Rainier in Washington, Mount Shasta in California, and Mount Hood in Oregon. These mountains have not erupted in many years but still have the potential to become active again in the future.
Land Volcanoes eat lamas and underwater volcanoes eat camals
Volcanoes, faults, plate boundaries, mountains, oceanic trenches, rift zones, young crust, and continental crust.