Canary hotspot

The Canary hotspot, also called the Canarian hotspot, is a volcanic hotspot believed to be located at the Canary Islands off the north-western coast of Africa, although alternative theories have also been suggested to explain the volcanism there.[1] The Canary hotspot is believed to be underlain by a mantle plume that is relatively deep. It is believed to have first appeared about 60 million years ago.[2]

The Canary hotspot is marked 18 on map

Recent activity

From July to September 2011, the Canarian island of El Hierro experienced thousands of small tremors, believed to be the result of magma movements beneath the island. This resulted in fears of an imminent volcanic eruption, which began October 10, 2011, approximately 1 km south of the island in a fissure on the floor of the ocean and is continuing with the possibility that a new island will form or an existing island become larger.[3]

gollark: People do work, because they can get money, and money can be exchanged for goods and services™.
gollark: > literal slavesThat is not accurate by any sane definition of "slaves".
gollark: Having everyone produce lots of things individually would be waaaaay less efficient and worse.
gollark: What, you expect everyone to individually produce their entire supply chain?
gollark: I mean, the existence of a bunch of products generally, but not particular versions of them.

See also

References

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