When a mud volcano erupted last week and created a muddy mound of an island just off the southern coast of Pakistan, it seemed to us like a rather rare development.
But it turns out islands crop up fairly often. Charles Darwin commented on one. And it's been happening in shallow marshy patches off the coasts of Sweden and Finland for millennia.
Darwin's Find
Back in 1835, Darwin found a bit of seafloor that had been wrenched up to the surface in Chile. He recounts the story in
A Naturalist's Voyage
Arriving on the island of Quiriquina after an earthquake, he wrote that some areas looked "as if they had been blasted by gunpowder" and even that "some cows which were standing on the steep side of the island were rolled into the sea."
Darwin also describes fresh chunks of island, hugging what had formerly been the shore. In a journal entry from March 4, he wrote: "During my walk around the island, I observed that numerous fragments of rock, which, from the marine productions adhering to them, must recently have been lying in deep water, had been cast up high on the beach."
The scene prompted a moment of realization.
"A bad earthquake at once destroys our oldest associations," he wrote. "The earth, the very emblem of solidity, has moved beneath our feet like a thin crust over a fluid; one second of time has created in the mind a strange idea of insecurity, which hours of reflection would not have produced."
New Nordic Islands
In Finland and Sweden, islands have been slowly but steadily popping out of the sea for thousands of years.
It's a phenomenon called land uplift. About 10,000 years ago, a very heavy, mile-thick glacier melted away as the last Ice Age receded. Coastal land bordering Sweden and Finland has been
rebounding
These new islands are stable, and have nothing to do with earthquakes. Yet because of them, Finland is
growing
Their continually growing presence got people
wondering
Will Pakistan's Island Stick Around?
Pakistan's new island near the coastal town of Gwadar is mostly a mound of mud that used to be part of the seafloor, a rocky pile somewhere between the
size
Islands formed by mud volcanoes tend to be unstable, often washing away within months after forming. This one has reportedly been releasing
methane
The newest one is being called Zalzala Koh, or "Quake Hill," by residents of Gwadar, some of whom ventured out to walk around the island. Quake Hill joins a host of
other
In 1945, four islands popped up after the seafloor
spewed
According to
one account
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