Hekla - translation to ρωσικά
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Hekla - translation to ρωσικά

STRATOVOLCANO IN SOUTHERN ICELAND
Mount Hekla; Mt. Hekla; Hekla volcano; Hekla 4
  • Þjórsá river]] in the foreground
  • Hekla beyond a snowy field of volcanic ash
  • [[Sea Campion]] colonising ground close to Hekla
  • Hekla circa 1851
  • Mount Hekla erupting in 1980. Seen from 4 km NE of the summit.
  • Detail of [[Abraham Ortelius]]' 1585 map of Iceland showing Hekla in eruption. The Latin text translates as "The Hekla, perpetually condemned to storms and snow, vomits stones under terrible noise".
  • The Hekla Centre
  • Hekla in winter 2010
  • Hekla in 2006 and an [[Icelandic horse]]
  • The flanks of Hekla
  • The Pæla lava field in 2009 with a lava river from the 1947 eruption
  • A summer 2009 view of Hekla from the side.
  • ericoides]]'' on lava originating from Hekla.
  • A lava field on Hekla in July 2000
  • Hekla circa 1893
  • Tephra horizons in south-central Iceland. The thick and light coloured layer at center of the photo is rhyolitic tephra from Hekla.
  • Hekla circa 1904
  • Illustration from [[Olaus Magnus]]'s ''[[Historia de gentibus septentrionalibus]]'', book 2, 1555
  • Stöng]], which was buried under volcanic ash from the 1104 eruption
  • Icelandair's ''Hekla Aurora'' in 2014
  • A map of the volcanic systems of Iceland

Hekla         

['heklə]

существительное

география

Гекла (вулкан)

Βικιπαίδεια

Hekla

Hekla (Icelandic pronunciation: ​[ˈhɛhkla] (listen)), or Hecla, is a stratovolcano in the south of Iceland with a height of 1,491 m (4,892 ft). Hekla is one of Iceland's most active volcanoes; over 20 eruptions have occurred in and around the volcano since 874. During the Middle Ages, the Icelandic Norse called the volcano the "Gateway to Hell".

Hekla is part of a volcanic ridge, 40 km (25 mi) long. The most active part of this ridge, a fissure about 5.5 km (3.4 mi) long named Heklugjá [ˈhɛhklʏˌcauː], is considered to be within Hekla proper. Hekla looks rather like an overturned boat, with its keel being a series of craters, two of which are generally the most active.

The volcano's frequent large eruptions have covered much of Iceland with tephra, and these layers can be used to date eruptions of Iceland's other volcanoes. Approximately 10% of the tephra created in Iceland in the last thousand years has come from Hekla, amounting to 5 km3. Cumulatively, the volcano has produced one of the largest volumes of lava of any in the world in the last millennium, around 8 km3.

Μετάφραση του &#39Hekla&#39 σε Ρωσικά