Jabuka (island)

Coordinates: 43°05′N 15°27′E / 43.083°N 15.450°E / 43.083; 15.450
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Map
The island is located west of Vis.
View of 97m tall Jabuka island from southwest
View from Biševo island: from left to right: Brusnik, Svetac, Jabuka.

Jabuka (pronounced [jâbuka], which means apple in Croatian) is an uninhabited volcanic island in the Adriatic Sea, west of the island of Vis.[1][2] It is part of the Dalmatian archipelago. The closest land masses are the small islands of Svetac and Brusnik. Jabuka is the farthest from the nearest land mass out of all Croatian islands.

Flora and fauna

Its

sea bream. However, due to remoteness, lack of safe harbor, strong currents, and sudden changes of weather, fishermen have traditionally avoided the waters around Jabuka.[4]

Geological features

Jabuka has 97-meter (318 ft) tall cliffs. The island is composed of igneous magnetite rocks,[5] which cause magnetic anomalies that confuse compasses.[6] Due to its iron-rich rock, Jabuka is frequently struck by lightning.[7]: 177 

The area around the island is prone to earthquakes due to the Jabuka–Andrija Fault. In 2003, the island was struck by a long series of earthquakes, the largest of which was Mw 5.5.[7] Another series occurred in 2004–05 with a ML 5.2 quake.[8]: 100–101  However, due to Jabuka's remoteness, these earthquakes are weakly felt on the Croatian mainland and inhabited islands.

References

  1. ^ Walking in Croatia by Rudolf Abraham
  2. ^ Frommer's Croatia by Karen Torme Olson
  3. ^ Šerić 2006, p. 15.
  4. ^ Šerić 2006, pp. 12, 14.
  5. PMID 20085897
    .
  6. ^ PÁLINKÁS, LADISLAV A; SOSTARIC, SIBILA BOROJEVIC; PÁLINKÁS, SABINA STRMIC; CRNJAKOVIC, MARTA; NEUBAUER, FRANZ; MOLNÁR, FERENC; BERMANEC, VLADIMIR. "Volcanoes in the Adriatic Sea: Permo-Triassic magmatism on the Adriatic-Dinaridic carbonate platform" (PDF). Acta Mineralogica-Petrographica, Field Guide Series. 8: 1-15.
  7. ^ .
  8. . Retrieved 19 April 2022.

Bibliography

43°05′N 15°27′E / 43.083°N 15.450°E / 43.083; 15.450