29. This modest set of Roman ruins, also in Pozzuoli, is the Serapeum or Temple of Serapis, one of the world's most famous geological sites. The columns that stand a little right of center each have a darkened zone below their middle where aquatic molluscs at one time bored into them. In other words, the columns were once largely submerged in the water. This demonstrates that the level of the land in this area has actually risen since the Middle Ages -- due to the emplacement of magma under the area's solid surface. Nor has this movement stopped. This photo was taken in 1976; about seven years later, the surface began to rise again, prompting fears that a new volcanic eruption in the Campi Flegrei was imminent. The columns rose almost completely out of the water. Even more recently, though, subsidence has resumed, and the temple area has lowered again somewhat.