Can you swim under islands




















The ocean floor is called the abyssal plain. Below the ocean floor, there are a few small deeper areas called ocean trenches. Features rising up from the ocean floor include seamounts, volcanic islands and the mid-oceanic ridges and rises. Islands are not floating at all.

They are actually mountains or volcanos that are mostly underwater. Their bases are connected to the sea floor. Originally Answered: Can u swim under an island? Islands are the tops of mountains under the sea, so if you dive down to the sea floor you will find out that they are attached to the ground.

So you cannot swim underneath them. It is the only place in the world where you can swim between two tectonic plates. What makes Australia such a hostile country? The Sun — Australia lies under a hole in the ozone layer, and ultraviolet rays burn the skin like nothing else. Would you collect more rain on the windscreen of your car if you were moving or if you were still?

Blog Stats 2,, hits Visitors since Terms and Conditions Click here Warning We are doing maintenance on this site, so some posts may disappear for a short time. Normal service will soon be resumed I mean islands are not connected to the core of the earth so you could actually swim under them. So just say we could swim under islands because they arent attached to the core, would we be able to swim under Australia? I know it is a stupid question but I have to do a project and I am supposed to research about a question that has been on your mind lately.

So if you dont mind I would really appreciate it if you could answer my question. Thank you!! You are commenting using your WordPress. You are commenting using your Google account. You are commenting using your Twitter account. You are commenting using your Facebook account. One us correspondent reported, "On passing Watlins island, which lay off about 48 km," said Skipper Warnecke, "we steamed close to a floating island.

Upon it were what appeared to be a large number of stately palm trees. I had never encountered anything like this before. The floating island was moving, and that, too, at a slow rate. Curious for a thorough investigation, I steamed still closer to the object, and was amazed to find what I took to be palm trees were full-grown cocoanut trees, and laden with fruit of the largest kind. Then I ordered a boat lowered and, together with the first mate, made a landing on the still moving island.

Then another surprise awaited us. High up in the trees was a small colony of mischievous monkeys, and as we got nearer they shied a number of cocoanuts at us. After a lot of trouble we secured two of the attacking simians and at least a dozen cocoanuts. Then we took to our boats, boarded the steamer, ordered full steam ahead, and soon the strange floating island was lost in haze.

But another surprise was in store for us the following day, when we passed within glass sight of another singular floating object just off the port bow. The lookout sung out 'Land ahead. Still, curious from the previous day's experience, I determined to solve this further mystery of the sea, so I gave orders for the ship to steam close to what I now made out to be another floating island.

Again I had a boat lowered, and with the same crew we landed on the island. We found it to be an exact duplicate of the day before, with an exception --instead of monkeys we found a big covey of parrots of most brilliant plumage. Among them was one who was evidently the patriarch of the tribe, and I do not exaggerate when I say that the aged fellow could cuss in two languages.

He was evidently a lost pet. We took him and a couple of his fellows aboard the steamer, and soon left the floating island in the distance. They support the theory that floating islands have been important in the dispersal of plant and animal species across the oceans, and are important in explaining evolution. They are islands made of various earth materials that are created off mainland coastlines for a variety of reasons. Some of the earliest man-made islands in history were from the Uros people of Lake Titicaca of Peru.

These people used reinforced bundles of reed to form a large, floating island. They then built small villages upon the floating reed as a means of staying safe from various outside attacks. It was found that the reed beds could aid in reducing water pollutants and improve water quality. Additionally, these artificial floating islands are a way to create biodiversity within a natural habitat as well.

Places like Australia use reed bed islands that are anchored near shorelines to prevent any potential hazards and making the reed bed a part of the shoreline composition. It is often thought that some islands are shrinking in size. While weather or natural disaster can play a big role in the shrinkage of an island, the appearance of them becoming smaller is due to rising sea levels.

The various systems of floating islands that exist throughout the world are able to stay afloat due to water buoyancy. Essentially, the upward force of the water on the floating islands which are usually made of reeds and other earth materials acts as a means of floating. Additionally, the earth materials of floating islands have a natural buoyancy which aids in their floatation as well.



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