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Climate and science correspondent
Santorini’s peak rocks are a world-famous tourism industry worth millions. The bottom is at risk of explosion occurring.
A large ancient eruption created a dreamer Greek island, a large crater and a horse-shaped ring.
Now scientists are investigating how dangerous the next one can be the first time.
The BBC news spent a day a day a day, the British royal study sent the discovery as they were looking for tips.
A few weeks ago, half of Santorin’s residents of Santorin ran for security when half of the 11,000 residents were closed in a number of earthquakes.
Gyros restaurant, hot tubs in air restaurants and hot tubs in rich volcanic land, two tectonic tiles were white villages covered with vineyards in the ground.
The profile of very dangerous underwater volcanoes with the British National Oceanography Center is headed by Isobel Yeo Mission. Two-thirds of the world’s volcanoes are close, but they are difficult to watch.
“Compared to those more popular as Vesuvius,” Compared to those who are more popular on the deck, “it is foolish, unwise, foolish, foolish,” he said.
This case, followed by earthquakes, will help scientists understand what kind of vulcan eruption of seismic riots will approach.
The last eruption of Santorini was in 1950, but since 2012 had a “unrest period” since 2012, Isobel says. Magma flowed on the cameras of volcanoes and the islands “swollen”.
“Underwater volcanoes are really great, really devastating eruptions,” he says.
“If you are used to move small eruptions and volcanoes, we give a sense of fake security. You think the next will be the same – but it can’t be,” he says.
In the Pacific in 2022, the Hunga Tunga eruption used the biggest underwater explosion and created a tsunami in the Atlantic with shock waves felt in the UK. Some islands in the task near the volcano, so much destruction of their people.
300 m (984ft) below our feet on the ship is low, hot vents. These cracks in the ground turn into a bright orange world of rocks and gas clouds.
“We have more information about the surface of some planets,” Isobel says.
Robot goes to the bottom of the sea to collect liquids, collecting gases and close the parts of the rock.
These gaps are hydrothermal, ie hot water pours and often approach volcanoes.
Therefore, Isobel and 22 scientists around the world are a month for this ship.
So far, when these gaps mixed with seawater magma, no one has been able to work when a volcano is more or less explosives.
“We are trying to map the hydrothermal system,” Isobel explains. It’s not like making a map in the land. “We must look inside the earth,” he says.
Discovering Santorini’s investigation of Caldera and other large volcanoes in this region examines other great volcanoes in the northeastern (4.3 mile).
Two volcanoes are not expected to be sprayed rapidly, but it is just a matter.
The expedition will create information sets and geohazard maps for the Greek Civil Protection Agency, and Member of the Government Emergency Group, who met during the guest crisis, said Prof. Paraskevi Nomikou.
He heard about Santorini, past earthquakes and scars from the grandfather. Vulcano inspired him to become a geologist.
“This study is very important, because local people will be able to enter the area where volcanoes are active and the eruption will be prohibited.”
Santorini will discover which parts of the sea are the most dangerous.
These missions are incredibly expensive, so scientists are Izobel crams in the day and night practices for working in shifts for 12 hours.
John Jamieso, a professor at the Canadian University of Canada in Newfoundland, shows volcanic rocks removed from volcanoes.
He warns “don’t take one.” “It’s full of Arsenic.”
It is a black and orange pollination, which looks like a black and orange meringue, he explains: “This is a real mystery – we do not know what it is.”
These rocks say the material in the history of the material inside the liquid, temperature and volcano. “It’s a different geological environment for others – it’s really excited,” he says.
However, the heart of the mission is a dark shipping container on the deck where the walls of four people look at the walls of four.
Using a joystick that will not look at a play console, two engineers manage the underwater robot. Isobel and paraskevi, the theories of trade in a liquid pool found by the robot.
They celebrated very small earthquakes around the volcano, which moves through the system and caused the fluid causing fractures. ISobel, the sound records of reverberating fractures play us. Sounds like the bass in a nightclub.
They determine how an electromagnetic field moves from the rocks by making a pulse on earth.
This creates a 3D map showing how the dilothermal system is connected to the magma camera of the volcano in which the eruption emergency.
“We are not scientists for scientists, not science for people. We are here to feel safe,” says Paraskevi says.
The last earthquake crisis in Santorini stressed how confident of the seismic threats and tourism of the inhabitants of the island.
Return to the dry area, photographer Eva Rendl meets his favorite place for wedding shoots. In February, when the earthquakes were hit by the so-called hearth, he left his name with his daughter.
“It was really terrible because it’s more and more dense,” he says.
Now it’s back, but the job is slow. “People canceled orders. Normally, I start shooting in April, but my first job is not until May.”
Santorini’s upmarket Town’s main square OIA, English-Canadian tourist Janet, 10 says he cancel his strike.
Believe in more accurate scientific information about the probability of earthquakes and volcanoes, be sure to make sure others are more sure to visit.
“I get Google warnings, I receive the warnings of scientists, and it helps me feel safe,” he said.
But Santorini will always have a dream place. In the imergent, we see two people who climb curved roofs to get the perfect shot.
The couple – married for only 15 minutes – he traveled from Latvia and did not leave the island’s underwater risks.
“I really wanted to marry a volcano,” he said. Tom, bride next to Kristina.
Additional report by Tom Ingham and Kevin Church, Climate and Science Team