Bath, named after the Roman baths there that used thermal springs. They are still there today and visited by many people although you can't bathe in them. The local public swimming pool also has water heated from the same source.
The spa city of Bath, England was built at the mouth of an extinct volcano. This volcano is responsible for the hot springs and spas that made the city famous for bathing from the days of the Roman Empire to today.
extinct volcano
Volcano Villarica is not extinct it is an active volcano.
A volcano that is thought to be incapable of further eruptions is said to be extinct.A volcano that is inactive but not extinct is said to be dormant.
An extinct volcano must have not erupted in historical times (when history was first recorded). It takes many many years to distinguish an extinct volcano from a dormant one, and it is very difficult too. An example would be the Fourpeaked Mountain in Alaska, which prior to September 2006, is not believed to have erupted since earlier than 7994 BC! Mostly, it takes about 5,000 to 6,000 years for a dormant volcano to be considered extinct, except in rare cases. Another would be the hotspot theory. Whenever a volcano island moves away from the hotspot, the magma source is cut off, and the volcano is considered extinct. An example would the Hawaii Chain Islands.
A volcano is said to be extinct when it isn't there any more.
The opposite of an active volcano is an extinct volcano, which is a volcano that has not erupted in a long time and is not expected to erupt again.
An extinct volcano is one that is not expected to erupt again because it has been dormant for thousands of years. In contrast, an active volcano is one that is currently erupting or has erupted recently.
The volcano is said to be extinct if it hasn't erupted for at least 10,000 years.
A dormant volcano is one that is just sleeping and it is possible to erupt again. An extinct volcano will never erupt again.
if a rift zone stops speeding, the volcano will become extinct:)
Experts say that it is 'possibly' active, but hasn't erupted for thousands of years.