On land, volcanoes form when one tectonic plate moves under another. Usually a thin, heavy oceanic plate subducts, or moves under, a thicker continental plate. When this happens, the ocean plate sinks into the mantle.
snowcapped Mt. Rainier beyond the city
The Mount Rainier volcano in Washington is considered "active." Volcanoes are classified as active (erupted recently), dormant (expected to erupt in the future), or extinct (not expected to erupt again).
Water trapped in the rocks in this plate gets squeezed out. This causes some of the rocks to melt. The melted rock, or magma, is lighter than the surrounding rock and rises up. This magma collects in magma chambers, but it is still miles below the surface.
When enough magma builds up in the magma chamber, it forces its way up to the surface and erupts, often causing volcanic eruptions.
In the ocean, volcanoes erupt along cracks that are opened in the ocean floor by the spreading of two plates called a mid-ocean ridge . Magma from Earth's upper mantle rises up to fill these cracks. As the lava cools, it forms new crust on the edges of the cracks. These mid-ocean ridges are actually long chains of underwater volcanoes that circle the planet like the seams on a baseball.
About 80 to 90 percent of all volcanic eruptions occur where the plates spread apart.
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