Erebus$511546$ - definition. What is Erebus$511546$
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1916 CLASS OF BRITISH MONITORS
Erebus class monitor; Erebus-class

HMS Erebus (I02)         
EREBUS-CLASS MONITOR
HMS Erebus (1916)
HMS Erebus was a First World War monitor launched on 19 June 1916 and which served in both world wars. She and her sister ship are known as the .
Erebus hotspot         
  • satellite image
ARCTIC VELOCITY
Erebus hot spot; Mount Erebus hotspot
The Erebus hotspot is a volcanic hotspot responsible for the high volcanic activity on Ross Island in the western Ross Sea of Antarctica. Its current eruptive zone, Mount Erebus, has erupted continuously since its discovery in 1841. Magmas of the Erebus hotspot are similar to those erupted from hotspots at the active East African Rift in eastern Africa. Mount Bird at the northernmost end of Ross Island and Mount Terror at its eastern end are large basaltic shield volcanoes that have been potassium-argon dated 3.8–4.8 and 0.8–1.8 million years old.Morgan, W.J.; Phipps Morgan, J. (2007) "Plate velocities in hotspot reference frame: electronic supplement".
HMS Erebus         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
H.M.S. Erebus
Five ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Erebus after Erebus, the dark region of Hades in Greek Mythology.

ويكيبيديا

Erebus-class monitor

The Erebus class of warships was a class of 20th century Royal Navy monitors armed with a main battery of two 15-inch /42 Mk 1 guns in a single turret. It consisted of two vessels, Erebus and Terror, named after the two ships lost in the Franklin Expedition. Both were launched in 1916 and saw active service in World War I off the Belgian coast. After being placed in reserve between the wars, they served in World War II, with Terror being lost in 1941 and Erebus surviving to be scrapped in 1946.