Fissure eruptions are most common at mid-oceanic ridges and continental plateaus. Instead of a central vent, magma emerges through long fractures or cracks in the crust. This occurs at divergent boundaries where plates pull apart, allowing low-viscosity basaltic lava to spread over vast areas. This process is responsible for creating the oceanic crust and massive landforms like the Deccan Traps. ANSWER: (C) Mid-oceanic ridges and plateaus
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Fissure eruptions occur when magma reaches the surface through long linear cracks rather than a single pipe. This is the dominant form of volcanism at mid-oceanic ridges, where tectonic plates diverge. Geographically, these eruptions are responsible for the seafloor spreading process that constantly renews the ocean floor. On land, fissure eruptions create “flood basalts” that form extensive volcanic plateaus. Because the basaltic lava is highly fluid, it floods the landscape in thin, horizontal layers. This type of volcanic activity is less explosive but geographically significant for building the Earth’s most extensive igneous rock provinces.