Former island
Appearance
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A former island is a mass of land that was once an island, but has been joined to a mainland, another island, or engulfed by a body of water. The process of joining might be the result of volcanic activity, moving tidal sands, or through land reclamation. Islands engulfed by the sea may have lowered because of subsidence, tectonic activity, erosion, or rising sea levels. For example, the New Moor island in Bangladesh existed in the 1970s, but was engulfed by the Bay of Bengal in 2011.
Examples
[edit]- Eldøyane, a partially artificial former island in Norway
- Harriet Island, a former island in the Mississippi River in Saint Paul, Minnesota, now joined to the mainland of Saint Paul
- Any of several former Islands in the River Thames, England
- Mount Muria, now part of Java
- Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera, a Spanish former island now joined to the Moroccan shore by a sandy isthmus
- Sakurajima, a former island now joined to the mainland in Japan
- Sevan Island, a former island in Armenia, now a peninsula
- Urk, a former island now part of the reclaimed Noordoostpolder in the Netherlands, a victim of the Zuiderzee Works, a land fill designed by Cornelis Lely
See also
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to former islands.
Further reading
[edit]- Johnson, H & Kuwahara, S (2016), "Sakurajima: Maintaining an island essence", Shima: The International Journal of Research into Island Cultures, vol. 10, no.1, pp. 48–66.
References
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