Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Myōjin-shō> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 51 of
51
with 100 items per page.
- Myōjin-shō abstract "Myōjin-shō (明神礁) is a submarine volcano located about 450 kilometers south of Tokyo on the Izu-Ogasawara Ridge in the Izu Islands. Volcanic activity has been detected there since 1869. Since then it has undergone more eruptions, the most powerful of which resulted in the appearance and disappearance of a small island.The name Myōjin-shō derives from a fishing boat, No.11 Myōjin-Maru of Yaizu City, Shizuoka Prefecture, the crew of which first witnessed the major volcanic eruption of 1952.".
- Myōjin-shō thumbnail Myojin-sho.jpg?width=300.
- Myōjin-shō wikiPageID "10854462".
- Myōjin-shō wikiPageRevisionID "582687728".
- Myōjin-shō elevationM "-50".
- Myōjin-shō lastEruption "1970".
- Myōjin-shō location Izu_Islands.
- Myōjin-shō location Japan.
- Myōjin-shō name "Myōjin-shō".
- Myōjin-shō photo "Myojin-sho.jpg".
- Myōjin-shō photoCaption "Steam pours from the blocky summit of a lava dome formed at Myōjin-shō during a submarine eruption at the Bayonnaise Rocks volcano in 1952.".
- Myōjin-shō type Lava_dome.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:1952_natural_disasters.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:Ephemeral_islands.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:Izu_Islands.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:Natural_disasters_in_Japan.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:New_islands.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:Postwar_Japan.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:Seamounts_of_the_Pacific_Ocean.
- Myōjin-shō subject Category:Submarine_volcanoes.
- Myōjin-shō point "31.918333333333333 140.02166666666668".
- Myōjin-shō type Mountain.
- Myōjin-shō type NaturalPlace.
- Myōjin-shō type Place.
- Myōjin-shō type Wikidata:Q532.
- Myōjin-shō type Mountain.
- Myōjin-shō type Place.
- Myōjin-shō type Location.
- Myōjin-shō type SpatialThing.
- Myōjin-shō comment "Myōjin-shō (明神礁) is a submarine volcano located about 450 kilometers south of Tokyo on the Izu-Ogasawara Ridge in the Izu Islands. Volcanic activity has been detected there since 1869. Since then it has undergone more eruptions, the most powerful of which resulted in the appearance and disappearance of a small island.The name Myōjin-shō derives from a fishing boat, No.11 Myōjin-Maru of Yaizu City, Shizuoka Prefecture, the crew of which first witnessed the major volcanic eruption of 1952.".
- Myōjin-shō label "Myōjin-shō".
- Myōjin-shō label "Myōjin-shō".
- Myōjin-shō label "Myōjin-shō".
- Myōjin-shō label "Myōjin-shō".
- Myōjin-shō label "Мёдзин".
- Myōjin-shō label "明神礁".
- Myōjin-shō label "明神礁".
- Myōjin-shō sameAs My%C5%8Djin-sh%C5%8D.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Mjódžin.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Myōjin-shō.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Myōjin-shō.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Myōjin-shō.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Myōjin-shō.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs 明神礁.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Myōjin-shō.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Q1761242.
- Myōjin-shō sameAs Q1761242.
- Myōjin-shō lat "31.918333333333333".
- Myōjin-shō long "140.02166666666668".
- Myōjin-shō wasDerivedFrom Myōjin-shō?oldid=582687728.
- Myōjin-shō depiction Myojin-sho.jpg.