Has anyone ever noticed something about the Greek Islands and the surrounding area? Allowing for the curvature of the earth those two elongated seas, the Red Sea and the Adriatic Sea, actually form a straight line. The Greek island of Santorini, which was once ruled by Venice and still has it's Italian name, is the only Aegean island that is volcanic in origin. What is so interesting is that, not only is Santorini on the line formed by the two seas, it is exactly halfway between them. Image from Google Earth.
The white dot is on the Adriatic Sea and the red dot is on the Red Sea.
This again proves what we saw in the geology theory of lines of magma emergence. There is an abbreviated version of the theory in "Geology Theory With Satellite Imagery And Maps", March 2024.
These lines of magma emergence also show up in hot springs, where the water is heated by magma emergence. England's only hot springs are at Bath, which gives the city it's name. Look at how two sections of coast, indicated by the white dots, form a straight line and Bath is on this line. Image from Google Earth.
I could have gone on forever with showing how magma emergence explains virtually every major feature of the earth's surface, both on land and on the seafloor. I left some things out because they didn't show up well on Google Earth.
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