Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Apagado> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 78 of
78
with 100 triples per page.
- Apagado abstract "Apagado (Spanish for Extinct, also known as Hualiaque) is a pyroclastic cone with scattered vegetation cover. It has an approximately 400 m (1,312 ft)-wide crater and a base diameter of approximately 2 km (1 mi). The volcano is located in Chile's Los Lagos Region, and lies 13 km (8 mi) west of the Hornopirén Volcano and southwest of Yate Volcano on a peninsula that borders the Reloncaví Estuary, Reloncaví Sound and Gulf of Ancud. Apagado has a nearly intact summit crater.".
- Apagado elevation "1210.0".
- Apagado locatedInArea Chile.
- Apagado locatedInArea Los_Lagos_Region.
- Apagado mountainRange Andes.
- Apagado thumbnail Volcanic_complex_Apagado.jpg?width=300.
- Apagado type Volcanic_cone.
- Apagado wikiPageExternalLink learn_products.cfm?p=9.
- Apagado wikiPageID "15390385".
- Apagado wikiPageLength "2003".
- Apagado wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Apagado wikiPageRevisionID "666908634".
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Andes.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mountains_of_Chile.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pyroclastic_cones.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Category:Volcanoes_of_Los_Lagos_Region.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Chile.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Gulf_of_Ancud.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Hornopirén.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink List_of_volcanoes_in_Chile.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Los_Lagos_Region.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Reloncaví_Estuary.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Reloncaví_Sound.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Spanish_language.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Volcanic_cone.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink Yate_(volcano).
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLink File:Hornopirén_and_hualiaque_or_apagado_volcanoes_chile_x_region.jpg.
- Apagado wikiPageWikiLinkText "Apagado".
- Apagado elevationM "1210".
- Apagado lastEruption "Unknown".
- Apagado location Chile.
- Apagado location Los_Lagos_Region.
- Apagado name "Apagado".
- Apagado photo "Volcanic_complex_Apagado.jpg".
- Apagado photoCaption "The volcano is visible in the lower center of this NASA image.".
- Apagado range Andes.
- Apagado type Volcanic_cone.
- Apagado wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Andean_volcanoes.
- Apagado wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_gvp.
- Apagado wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Convert.
- Apagado wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Apagado wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_mountain.
- Apagado wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:LosLagos-geo-stub.
- Apagado wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Apagado subject Category:Mountains_of_Chile.
- Apagado subject Category:Pyroclastic_cones.
- Apagado subject Category:Volcanoes_of_Los_Lagos_Region.
- Apagado hypernym Cone.
- Apagado point "-41.88333333333333 -72.58333333333333".
- Apagado type Mountain.
- Apagado type NaturalPlace.
- Apagado type Place.
- Apagado type Landform.
- Apagado type Location.
- Apagado type Mountain.
- Apagado type Place.
- Apagado type Thing.
- Apagado type SpatialThing.
- Apagado type Q8502.
- Apagado comment "Apagado (Spanish for Extinct, also known as Hualiaque) is a pyroclastic cone with scattered vegetation cover. It has an approximately 400 m (1,312 ft)-wide crater and a base diameter of approximately 2 km (1 mi). The volcano is located in Chile's Los Lagos Region, and lies 13 km (8 mi) west of the Hornopirén Volcano and southwest of Yate Volcano on a peninsula that borders the Reloncaví Estuary, Reloncaví Sound and Gulf of Ancud. Apagado has a nearly intact summit crater.".
- Apagado label "Apagado".
- Apagado sameAs Q617293.
- Apagado sameAs Apagado.
- Apagado sameAs Apagado.
- Apagado sameAs აპაგადო.
- Apagado sameAs m.03m6wrt.
- Apagado sameAs Апагадо.
- Apagado sameAs Apagado.
- Apagado sameAs Volcán_Apagado_(vulkan).
- Apagado sameAs 8048020.
- Apagado sameAs Q617293.
- Apagado sameAs 阿帕加多火山.
- Apagado lat "-41.88333333333333".
- Apagado long "-72.58333333333333".
- Apagado wasDerivedFrom Apagado?oldid=666908634.
- Apagado depiction Volcanic_complex_Apagado.jpg.
- Apagado isPrimaryTopicOf Apagado.
- Apagado name "Apagado (Hualiaque)".