A | B |
navigable | deep and wide enough to allow passage of ships |
dry framing | a farming technique that leaves land unplanted every few years in order to gather moisture |
sirocco | a hot, dry wind from northern Africa |
hub | a central point of concentrated activity and influence |
seismic activity | earthquakes and volcanic eruption |
subsidence | a geological phenomenon in which the ground in an area sinks |
Renaissance | the revival of art, literature, and learning that took place in Europe during the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries |
volcano | an opening in the earth's crust from which molten rock escapes to the surface |
lava | Magma, or molten rock from the earth's mantle, that breaks through the surface of the earth during volcanic activity |
columnar rock | volcanic rock that splits into columns as lava cooled |
plume | a very hot spot in the earth's mantle |
crater lake | a body of water that occupies a bowl-shaped depression around the opening of an extinct or dormant volcano |
graben | a long, narrow area that has dropped between two faults |
inhabitable | able to support permanent residents |
tsunami | a huge wave caused primarily by a disturbance beneath the ocean, such as an earthquake or a volcanic eruption |