What land feature is formed at the subduction zone?
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The first is mountain formation. Subduction zones always have mountain ranges caused by plate subduction. The next is volcanic activity as a plate is subducted the pressure and heat turns it into magma. These pockets of magma find paths to the surface and create volcanoes
Explanation:
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Land feature formed at the subduction zone is volcanoes and mountains.
Explanation:
- The subduction zone is something that happens only with convergent boundaries. Subduction is where, after colliding, one plate sinks below the other. And a subduction zone is the area where two plates are on top of each other.
- Subduction zones are places of high activity. When two huge tectonic plates collide, the pressure and friction are great enough that the material in the Earth's mantle can melt, and both earthquakes and volcanoes can result.
- However, two continental plates collide with such force that the material from each plate is broken up and forced upwards. This is how the biggest mountain ranges in the world form from the collision of two continental plates.
- The Himalayas is formed by the result of two continental plates collision, the Eurasian Plate and the Indian Plate. This collision continues to this day and the Himalayas are still getting taller.
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