Why don't volcanic arcs form at transform plate boundaries?(1 point)

Responses

Plates sliding past each other do not produce large pools of rising magma.
Plates sliding past each other do not produce large pools of rising magma.

Plates sliding past each other destroy all landforms at their edges.
Plates sliding past each other destroy all landforms at their edges.

Plates that pull away from each other produce earthquakes but not volcanoes.
Plates that pull away from each other produce earthquakes but not volcanoes.

Plates that push together don't form volcanoes.

1 answer

The correct response is:

Plates sliding past each other do not produce large pools of rising magma.

This is because transform plate boundaries involve lateral movement where plates slide past one another, rather than the subduction or rifting processes that generate volcanic activity.