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In this animation, we're going
to subduct some ocean floor
underneath the edge
of a continent.
And as that happens,
as you know,
you get an ocean trench.
But at a certain depth,
about 80 miles
down in the Earth,
the subduction
of the plate triggers melting
of the mantle.
And that magma rises
and a whole series
of volcanoes begins to pop
up along the edge
of the continent parallel
to the trench.
We call this a continental
volcanic arc.
The Andes Mountains are a
classic example
of such a system.
Now, another thing we can do
is have instead
of ocean floor subducting
underneath continent,
we could have ocean floor
subducting
under other ocean floor.
In this case,
the animation is flipped
around, but it doesn't
really matter.
You can imagine either
of these in a mirror image.
Same process.
We're going
to subduct the ocean floor
underneath this other
ocean floor.
We're going to generate magma.
The magma's going to rise
and a whole series
of volcanic islands is going
to pop up in the ocean
parallel to the trench.
You see how it's very similar
to the continental situation.
The only difference is
that the volcanoes are popping
up out of the ocean parallel
to the trench instead
of on land parallel
to the trench, okay.
So an example
of this would be the Aleutian
Islands, say,
or the Philippines
or the Marianas Islands
in the Pacific.
These are all what we call
volcanic island arcs,
of volcanic activity
Hot spots --
there's magma being generated
all along a long line.
where magma forms
in just one local area.
And we think these hot spots
or columns, of magma that rise
from deep in the mantle.
We call these mantle plumes,
And as tectonic plates move
if mantle plumes stay
and there's controversy
But let's assume the plume
stays in one place.
The volcano will get
Another volcano will form;
it'll get carried away
And yet another volcano will
form and it'll get
And you get a chain
of hot spot volcanic islands.
This is a classic example
of how for example the
Hawaiian Islands formed,
all in a line,
one after the other,
as they moved
across a hot spot.
Let's back this up again
and we'll show one volcano,
then another,
and then another forming
over the hot spot.
So those are the main reasons
and processes
by which the Earth makes
volcanic activity.