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Land in the water

Land in the water

Explosion after explosion of hot rock and ash spurted from the ocean. A
thick cloud of steam rose high into the air. Slowly, for many days, a
long mound of dark lava rose up out of the water. An island had been
bom!

An island, of course, is a piece of land with water all around it. But
the land doesn’t float on the water. What you see is the top of land
that sticks up from the bottom of the sea. Most islands far out in the
ocean are actually the tops of underwater volcanoes!

Volcanic islands are made when underwater volcanoes erupt, pouring out
red-hot, melted rock. The rock quickly cools and hardens in the water,
building up into a big, cone-shaped mountain. The island is the top of
the cone.

All islands aren’t volcanoes. Most islands in lakes and rivers are high
pieces of land that stick out of the water. Some islands are formed when
the sea separates them from the mainland. Great Britain was not always
an island. At one time, a low plain joined it to Europe. Thousands of
years ago, the sea covered this plain.

island of Surtsey, Iceland

Most islands in the ocean are the tops of underwater volcanoes. The
picture at left shows such an island being born. Smoke from the
underwater volcano is pouring up. Below, the top of the volcano has
risen from the water.

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