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 3D-view of Santorini's position in the Aegean Sea
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 Location and map of Santorini in the Southern Aegean Sea.
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 The caldera of Santorini with Nea Kameni (center) and Palea Kameni (left) volcanic islands in the middle. Therasia in the background.
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 Santorini after a storm on the caldera
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 The spectacular caldera cliffs beneath the capital Fira
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Santorini is a volcanic Island group at the central south end of the Cyclades in the Aegean Sea (Greece). As a popular tourist destination in Greece, it is renowned for its spectacular sea-filled volcanic caldera sourrounded by steep colorful cliffs, the beauty of its villages and fields.
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Volcano type |
caldera (complex stratovolcano) |
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Location |
Cyclades, South Aegean Sea, Greece, 36°25'N, 25°25'E |
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Summit elevation |
329 m (on caldera rim) / 128 m (top of most recent lava shield, Nea Kameni) |
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Last eruptions |
1613 BC +-7 years (the so-called "Minoan eruption", one of the largest plinian eruptions during the past 10,000 years on earth) 197 BC, 46/47 AD, 726, 1570-1573, 1707-1711, 1866-1870, 1925-1928, 1939-1941, 1950 |
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Typical eruption style |
Dominantly explosive, with effusive activity during intervals. Powerful explosive, so-called Plinian eruptions appear to occur every 10-30,000 years. Construction of lava shields and minor to irregularly spaced subplinian explosive activity during interval times. |


Santorini's volcano The island group of Santorini is the most well-known and active volcanic centre of the Hellenic Volcanic Arc in the south Aegean Sea. It is a very complex stratovolcano dominated by a large, sea-flooded caldera created by several large explosive eruptions. The different products of about 2 million years of volcanic activity have accumulated around a small non-volcanic basement, that once formed a small island similar to the other cycladic islands. Most of the volcanic layers are visible in the multi-colored sequences of the impressive steep inner walls of the caldera, striking the visitor who reaches the island by boat.  | 
 Satellite image of Santorini (Image: NASA / ASTER Science Team)
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 Tectonic setting of Santorini - red triangles show the volcanic centers of the Aegean volcanic arc (dotted line)
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The Minoan eruptionSantorini's volcanic activity during the past 2-500,000 years has been dominated by very large explosive eruptions at inverals of few tens of thousands of years. The most recent of this type occurred at around 1645 BC and is known as the so-called Minoan eruption. The late Bronze Age eruption, one of the biggest known volcanic explosions in younger time,- and one of the most studied, but still most mysterious eruptions of all time-, devastated not only Santorini, but had a deep impact on the whole of the Eastern Mediterranean. Perhaps it even had serious world-wide effects and changed history. Still today, one can see its deposits, the characteristic, tens of meters thick layer of white pumice and ash that blankets most of the surfact of the island group. The eruption changed the shape of the island itself dramatically: it is now believed that before the eruption, it had the shape of an almost complete ring that enclosed an earlier, shallower caldera. Then, large sections of island collapsed into the emptied magma chamber after the eruption, literally disappearing under the sea. The ring-island was breached to the W and NW, and the caldera was significantly widened and deepened. The Minoan eruption devastated the rich, highly developed economic centre, that Santorini was at that time. Since 1969, intense archaeological excavations have brought to light an important Cycladic/Minoan town which had been buried beneath the volcanic ash for almost 4000 years. Although it appears that people had time to evacuate their island in time before the eruption, carrying most of their goods with them, the findings from Akrotiri are impressive: especially, they include well-preserved and magnificent wall paintings, ceramics and other objects. Thanks to the work of numerous archaeologists, a new light was thrown on an important prehistoric period and culture. The spectacular discovery even induced continuing speculations that relate the volcanic destruction of Santorini to the legend of the sunken Atlantis. Santorini's historic activityAlthough at present dormant, Santorini has been active several times in historic time. Since its last major explosive eruption (at about 1645 BC) numerous minor and medium-sized, mainly effusive eruptions have occurred. This activity built the dark-colored islands of Nea and Palea Kameni inside the caldera. Their first appearance was witnessed and reported by Greek and Roman writers. The last eruption on Nea Kameni occured in 1950. At present, Santorini is dormant, and volcanism manifestates as fumarolic activity and hot springs around the islands. Further information / links:
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