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Christiana Islands
Group of islands in the Cyclades, Greece From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Christiana (Greek: Χριστιανά) is a group of three volcanic Greek islands in the Cyclades.[1]

The group is located about 16 km (10 miles) southwest of Santorini and is made up of the islands Christiani (Χριστιανή, the largest one), Eschati (Εσχάτη) and Askania (Ασκανιά), belonging to the same submarine volcanic edifice, which is assumed to have been dormant since the Early Pleistocene.[2] The islands' area is about 2.35 km2.
All three islands are now uninhabited, but on Christiani there are remains of human settlement dating back to Neolithic times. Christiana islands have been uninhabited since the 1890s and have remained unfarmed since then. As a result, artificial pesticides and fertilizers are absent from this ecosystem. In the mid-1970s, the largest island, Christiani, was considered by NATO as a military base intended to host a missile silo, but this never came to pass. These islands are privately owned and public access is restricted.
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