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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
  AMBRYM 2 I 9 
 
It would seem that the whole plain was formerly 
one gigantic crater; now only two openings are left, 
two craters 500 and 700 metres high, in the north-west 
of the plain. 
 
The ground consists of black, coarse-grained slag, 
which creaks when walked on, and forms a fine black 
dust. Naturally the vegetation in this poor soil is 
very scanty,——~only bushes and reed-grass, irregularly 
scattered in the valleys between little hillocks ranged 
in rows. This arid desert-scene is doubly surprising 
to the eye, owing to the sudden change from the 
forest to the bare plain. 
 
In this seemingly endless plain, the two craters 
rise in a bold silhouette, grimly black. One of them 
stands in lifeless rigidity, from the top of the other 
curl a few light, white clouds of steam. It is a 
depressingly dismal sight, without any organic life 
whatever on the steep, furrowed slopes. 
 
We camped on a hillock surrounded by shrubs; 
on all sides spread the plain, with low hills, rounded 
by rain and storm, radiating from the craters, and 
where these touched, a confused wilderness of hills, 
' like a black, agitated sea, had formed. The hilltops 
were bare, on the slopes there clung some yellowish 
moss. The farther away from the craters, the lower 
the hills became, disappearing at the edge of the 
plain in a bluish—green belt of woods. 
 
The sky was cloudy, a sallow light glimmered 
over the plain, and the craters lay in forbidding gloom 
and lifelessness, like hostile monsters. Hardly had 
I set up my camera, when the western giant began 
 
 
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