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Image source: Scrope, George Poulett (1797-1876). Memoir on the geology of central France; including the volcanic formations of Auvergne, the Velay, and the Vivarais. London: Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1827

Vulcan's Forge and Fingal's Cave

Volcanoes, Basalt, and the Discovery of Geological Time

Section IV. New Volcanic Islands at Santorini

In 1707 a new volcano arose from the sea near Santorini in the Aegean sea. Santorini, formerly known as Thera, had erupted explosively around 1500 BC, giving rise, it is believed, to Plato’s legend of Atlantis. In the eighteenth century, the creation of a new island by volcanism prompted several geologists to wonder if perhaps all dry land had arisen from volcanic action. For the first time, volcanoes were suspected of playing a role in creating landforms.

The illustration to this section is a detail from Ordinaire’s 1802 map of world-wide volcanism (exhibit item 41), showing volcanoes in the Mediterranean. Santorini (here Santorin) is marked with a little volcano, just north of Crete (here Candie), and is further labelled "Vol. soumarin".

Volcanic map of the Mediterranean. Image source: Ordinaire, Nicolas. Histoire naturelle des volcans: comprenant les volcans soumarins, ceux de boue, et autres phénomènes analogues. Paris: Chez Levrault frères, 1802, pl. 1.

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