Misplaced Pages

Methana Volcano

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Methana volcano peninsula is situated approximately 50 kilometres (31 mi) southwest of Athens in Greece .

#340659

19-538: The Methana (Μέθανα) peninsula contains some 32 volcanoes , including the Methana volcano, that are mostly andesitic and dacitic lava domes . The volcanic activity in the peninsula began 1 million years ago and continued sporadically until 300 years ago. The last eruptions took place in 1700 at a submarine volcano north of Kameni Chora . On land there is also the historic lava dome of Kameni Chora that erupted in 230 BC. In August 1922 there were numerous reports of

38-609: A volcanic (the Methana Volcano ) peninsula , attached to the Peloponnese. Administratively, it belongs to the Attica region. The town (pop. 892 in 2011) is located north of the road connecting to the rest of the Peloponnese and Galatas. The highest point is 740 metres (2,428 feet) (Helona Mountain). The municipal unit has a land area of 50.161 square kilometres (19.367 square miles) and a population of 1,352 inhabitants at

57-488: A community in the western part of the volcanic Methana peninsula, Greece . It is located 3 km northwest of Methana town. The community consists of the villages Megalochori, Vathy, Kaimeni Chora and Megalo Potami. The ancient Acropolis of Methana , which was described by Pausanias , is located near Megalochori. Near Megalochori is located the village Kameni Chora . In this place the last volcanic eruption of Methana Volcano happened between 277 and 240 B.C., during

76-463: A possible eruption in the Kaimeno Vouno crater, however, this still remains unconfirmed. Methana is in the northwestern part of the group of Cycladic volcanoes that are considered active ( Milos , Santorini and Nisyros ). The rocks are mostly dacites and andesites . On Methana there are thermal springs and mofettes (gas exhalations). Methana is cut by many tectonic faults, and so it

95-400: A smaller one and the mountains of the eastern tip of the neighboring peninsula. Much of the peninsula is mountainous and bushy and grassy. The mountain range covers the central part of the peninsula and has a small ridge north of the seat. The residential area is within the sea. The pastures are around Methana. A mountain ridge is founded in the west and is about 3 km (2 mi) long with

114-572: A stream in the middle and a cliff in the south. The earliest known settlement (near the village of Vathy) dates from 1500–1300 BC. The first survey was conducted by Michael Deffner , who discovered a large throne , among other artefacts. Many ancient sites were identified through the archaeological survey conducted in the 1980s by the University of Liverpool in association with the British School at Athens. The Acropolis Palaiokastro

133-584: A topographical map of the entire peninsula at a scale of 1:25,000 was made. An interactive 3D map was created and is on the World Wide Web. Also a rich photographic archive with about 10.000 color slides has been produced (see links below). The panorama of the northeastern part of Argolis , southeastern and eastern Corinthia along with the southern part of the Attica peninsula and the Saronic Islands of Aegina and Salamis along with

152-460: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Methana Methana ( Greek : Μέθανα , Méthana ) is a town and a former municipality on the Peloponnese peninsula, Greece . Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Troizinia-Methana , of which it is a municipal unit. The municipal unit has an area of 50.161 km . Methana is situated on

171-433: Is an area in high danger of earthquakes . The major fault cuts the town of Methana from west to east. The Methana peninsula has been inhabited since about 10,000 BC. The first settlements were founded about 6,000 BC. Excavations have brought to light a village and sanctuary from Mycenaean times near the town of Methana at the chapel of Sts. Constantine & Helen. Items dating from about 1500–1200 BC are preserved in

190-730: Is located near the village of Vathy but the main port is at Methana, also called Arsinoe in Ptolemaic times, with a fort on the islet of Nisaki. A coastal fortress called Akropolis Oga is located near Kypseli . A Mycenaean settlement was excavated by Helene Konstolakis-Jiannopoulou in 1990 along with the chapel of Agios Konstantinos and Elenis. Selected artifacts can be visited in the museums of Poros island and in Piraeus. This site dates between 1500 and 1300 BC. Methana ( ‹See Tfd› Greek : τὰ Μέθανα , tà Méthana ), Methone ( Μεθώνη , Methṓnē ), or Methene ( Μεθήνη , Methḗnē )

209-460: The Greek War of Independence , hundreds of refugees, mainly women and children, found refuge in the sparsely populated peninsula of Methana, so that the population of Methana rose from 500-600 in the pre-revolution years to 1,349 in 1830. In 1826-27 Charles Fabvier built a fortress on the isthmus of Methana, probably to protect his troops. In 1834 Methana became a municipality which was annexed to

SECTION 10

#1732786970341

228-442: The 2021 census. The municipal unit Methana is subdivided into the following communities (constituent villages in brackets): Half of the entire peninsula's population lives in Methana town. The peninsula is entirely of volcanic origin and contains over 30 volcanic eruption centers. The last volcanic eruption occurred near present-day Kameni Chora in 3rd century BC. Famous writers such as Ovid , Strabo and Pausanias reported

247-536: The 2nd century, he saw a temple of Isis , and statutes of Hermes and Heracles in the agora . There are no written references to Methana in the Byzantine and Ottoman periods. Ruins of basilicas and churches from the late 6th or early 7th century have been found. It seems that there were two settlements in Methana in the Byzantine period, one at Panagitsa and another at Prophet Elias and at Helona. Another settlement seems to have existed west of Kounoupitsa , where

266-481: The church of Agia Barbara is located and the churches of Agios Dimitrios and Agios Ioannis the Theologian, built in the 13th century and frescoed, are located. It seems that the peninsula was not affected by Slavic invasions, but later in medieval times it was affected by raids. During the 14th century, a period in which the population of the region was diluted, Arvanites settled on the Methana peninsula. During

285-523: The last volcanic eruption in Methana. The peninsula is the northwesternmost of the arc of the Aegean islands of which the active volcanic areas are Methana, Milos , Santorini and Nisyros . In the future, Methana (and the area of the Saronic gulf ) may expect other volcanic eruptions. Since 1991, the peninsula has been investigated by the team of ETH Zürich geologically and cartographically. From this,

304-644: The museums of Poros island and in Piraeus Archaeological museum in Athens. There were ancient sanctuaries in Geometric times, about 800–700 BC, such as the Geometric temple near Kounoupitsa village. There are also two ancient acropoleis (Paliocastro acropolis and Oga acropolis) and many ancient farm sites. The ancient writers Ovid , Strabo and Pausanias described the historic eruption of

323-411: The province of Kalavria, consisting of the municipalities of Methana, Troizina, Dryopi and Kalavria. [REDACTED]  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain :  Smith, William , ed. (1854–1857). "Methana". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography . London: John Murray. Kameni Chora Megalochori ( Greek : Μεγαλοχώρι ) is a village and

342-520: The volcano dome near the village of Kameni Chora in the northwestern part of the Methana peninsula. Pausanias also described hot springs after the eruption. Later there were many new buildings and sanctuaries founded near the village Vathy, at the Paliocastro hill and around it. Methana was also the site of a Phoenician base called Arsinoe. [REDACTED] Media related to Methana Volcano at Wikimedia Commons This Attica location article

361-602: Was in the territory of Troezen . In his History of the Peloponnesian War , Thucydides tells of an Athenian expeditionary force under Nicias that after defeating Corinth (in 425 BC) built a wall across the isthmus to cut the Methana peninsula off from the mainland. In the Hellenistic period, the peninsula became one of the Ptolemaic bases in the Aegean when it was renamed Arsinoe. When Pausanias visited in

#340659