I wish we opted the other trail so we can go down to
the actual crater lake.
Not exact matches
An exception to this may have been if you used a lightweight and / or hollow object that did not sink at least halfway into the layer of flour — if this happened, a relatively smaller
crater may have formed because the part of the object that hit the flour was smaller in diameter than the object's
actual, widest diameter.
The last
actual eruption was in 2010 but you may hear small rumbles, hissing, or see puffs of steam from the top of the
crater.
Yet to experience a
crater's
actual size, one would have to step back.
A myriad of raised
craters and rings approximate the moon's terrain rather than replicating its
actual geological features.