Yes. Mount Cameroon is a stratovolcano.
Mount Vesuvius was a stratovolcano . . . if that's what you mean.
Popocateptel, just outside of Mexico City, is a stratovolcano.
No, Mount Shasta is the other stratovolcano.
Yes. Santorini is a stratovolcano, or at least it was before collapsing into a caldera.
It is both. A stratovolcano is the same thing as a composite volcano.
It is both. A stratovolcano and a composite volcano are the same thing.
After the aspect (I was in the Nea Kameni island) Santorini is not a stratovolcano.
Mount St. Helens, an active stratovolcano, is of the composite type.
Mount St. Helens in Washington is an example of a stratovolcano. Its characteristic cone shape and explosive eruptions are typical of this type of volcano.
Mount Vesuvius is the peak near Pompeii in Italy. Mount Vesuvius is actually a stratovolcano. Its eruption in 79 AD destroyed the city of Pompeii.
The height of a stratovolcano can vary greatly, but they typically range from a few hundred meters to several kilometers in height. Mount Fuji in Japan, for example, is a well-known stratovolcano that stands at approximately 3,776 meters (12,389 feet) tall.