9°C
Porth, Newquay, Cornwall. UK
Updated28/03/2024 11:45 
 




Icelandic Volcanos

Aviation colour code map

Webcams


Click for enlarged aviation colour code map



Web cameras from Mķla
Icelandic Meteorological office - News
Icelandic Meteorological office - News

Icelandic Meteorological office

March 27th, 2024 19:15:00 EDT -0400 Activity of the volcanic eruption remains steady

Updated 27. March at 14:00 UTC

The volcanic eruption has been stable since Monday, 25 March. Eruption tremor has remained consistent since then, as has the activity in the three craters. Lava continues to flow southward from the craters mostly atop the lava field formed during the first days of the eruption. The following image shows the extension of the lava field as extrapolated from satellite images (ICEYE). The latest acquisition was on 26 March and it shows the widening of lava field towards the west, south of Hagafell, as well as further lava advancement towards the east and the south of the active vents.

March 26th, 2024 10:32:00 EDT -0400 Seismic swarm in the northwest past of the caldera in Askja yesterday

Yesterday (25 March) a seismic swarm occurred in the NW part of the Askja caldera. About 30 earthquakes were detected between 08.00UTC and midday. The largest earthquake detected had a magnitude M3,5 at a depth of about 5 km. Three earthquakes with magnitudes between M2 and M2,5 were also detected, the rest of the activity was characterized by smaller events. Overall, the seismic activity in the Askja has been quite stable between months and unchanged until yesterday. Looking back, we can see that earthquakes with magnitude above M3 were detected in January 2022 and October 2021.

February 26th, 2024 11:23:00 EST -0500 The weather in Iceland in 2023

The weather in 2023 was mostly favorable. It was calm, dry, relatively little snow and stormy days were quite uncommon. However, the year was cooler compared to the most recent years. The average nationwide temperature was 0.1Ā°C colder than the average temperature between 1991 and 2020, and 0.4Ā°C colder than the average temperature of the last ten years. It was relatively coldest in the North, while the Southwest and Southern coast were relatively warmer. The weather was particularly cold in the beginning of the year and again in March. June, on the other hand was exceptionally warm in the North and East. It was the warmest June on record in many places in those regions. The year was relatively dry, with precipitation below average across most of the country. There were several dry periods during the year, such as in March and July, but there were also periods of heavy rain in between. May and June were particularly wet and gloomy in the southern and western regions.

February 8th, 2024 14:07:00 EST -0500 New understanding of ultra-rapid formation of magma filled cracks in the Earth

On 10 November 2023 the town of GrindavĆ­k in Iceland was evacuated as massive amounts of magma suddenly flowed into a magma filled crack that propagated underneath the town. Magma was emplaced in a 'vertical sheet' type intrusion in the Earth's crust. An international team of scientists explains the formation of the intrusion, and conditions for ultra-rapid flow into cracks, in a new publication in the prestigious scientific journal Science.

January 23rd, 2024 05:46:00 EST -0500 Conclusion of Grƭmsvƶtn Glacial Outburst Flood

Updated 23 January at 9:00 UTC

Since the glacial flood reached its peak in the river Gƭgjukvƭsl approximately a week ago, the water level has been decreasing and is now comparable to what it was before the flood. The seismic tremor measured on the seismometer at Grƭmsfjall has also declined, with seismic noise now back to normal levels. Since last week Monday, 21 earthquakes have been recorded in Grƭmsvƶtn, including two earthquakes exceeding magnitude two.

October 3rd, 2023 12:10:00 EDT -0400 The uplift in Askja has slowed down

There is evidence of recent changes in the deformation data (cGNSS) around Askja. The deformation rate has decreased since the beginning of August and the signal has flattened at several stations within or around the caldera. At this stage it is uncertain what process is causing this pressure reduction, possibly the source of the inflation has been shut off or it could be related to an outflow of magmatic fluids.

August 29th, 2023 13:01:00 EDT -0400 Flood in SkaftĆ”

Updated on 29 August, at 17:00 

Hydrological measurements in SkaftĆ” at Sveinstindur show that the increase in discharge has slowed down.The discharge is estimated 620 m3/s at 15:00 compared to 600 m3/s at 9:00 this morning.

August 23rd, 2023 11:51:00 EDT -0400 No visible changes in geothermal activity around Askja and VĆ­ti

The field trip conducted by a team from IMO last week has been completed succesfully.

Preliminary results indicate no changes in the gases or waters compared to previous years while further sample and data analyses are ongoing. Visual inspections and temperature and pH measurements do not point to any clear changes in geothermal activity around Askja including in VĆ­ti. The observation on 12 August at the edge of BĆ”tnshraun which was reported as a possible steam plume is now recognized as dust caused by a minor rock fall on a steep slope of the caldera wall.

August 16th, 2023 10:44:00 EDT -0400 The situation at Askja remains unchanged

The latest deformation data indicates that the inflation continues at Askja with the position and depth of the inferred magma source unchanged since September 2021. The magma is accumulating at a depth of about 3 km, and there are currently no indications from geodetic observations that the magma has shallowed further. Ten days have passed since last activity was seen in the crater close to Litli-HrĆŗtur and since volcanic tremor reached its background level. No deformation is detected in the area and the seismic activity has decreased significantly.

August 10th, 2023 07:54:00 EDT -0400 The activity in the Reykjanes Peninsula has entered a new phase

Updated 10 August 2023

The Icelandic Met Office has updated the hazard map for the eruption site. The vicinity of the eruption area is still dangerous. High temperatures characterize the lava field. The solidified crust can be very thin in places with very hot and molten lava underneath. The edges of the new lava field are unstable and large chunks of lava can fall sudden. As a result of past activity there are fractures in the area that pose danger. The new lava continues degassing and hazardous gases can collect in depressions

June 30th, 2023 08:34:00 EDT -0400 Earthquakes in MĆ½rdalsjƶkull

There has been increased earthquake activity around Katla the past few days. An earthquake sequence started shortly after midnight 30. June. By 6:30 in the morning, 95 earthquakes had been detected, 8 over M3 and the largest was M4.4. The earthquake activity in MĆ½rdalsjƶkull the past weeks has been the most that has been measured there since fall 2016. Unusually high electrical conductivity for this time of year has been measured in MĆŗlakvĆ­sl. Gases associated with geothermal waters have been measured at LĆ”guhvolar. The measurements suggest elevated geothermal activity as the cause of the observed changes but it is not possible to exclude the possibility of magma movements. 

June 19th, 2023 08:29:00 EDT -0400 No changes in activity seen at Grƭmsvƶtn
The annual Icelandic Glaciological Society (JƶrfĆ­) spring trip which is a major maintenance and measurement trip for IMO and the University of Iceland (Hƍ) was completed in the first week of June. 

Since the beginning of the year around 10 to 30 earthquakes (> M1.0) have been detected each month in GrĆ­msvƶtn. The end of April ā€“ the beginning of May were the most active periods with the largest earthquake of this year so far was a M3.3 onā€Æthe 23. April. Since the middle of May the seismic activity has decreased.ā€Æ

Data Courtesy of en.vedur.is

Iceland sits right on top of two tectonic plates that are pulling away from each other, Bįršarbunga is part of a volcano system underneath a massive glacier in the center of the country. located under the ice cap of Vatnajökull glacier, rising to 2,009 metres (6,591 ft) above sea level, making it the second highest mountain in Iceland. Bįršarbunga, for its part, has been fairly quiet for some time. Geological records suggest that the volcano historically erupts a couple of times per century, with the last one occurring back in 1910.

Could Bįršarbunga erupt in the near future. On August 16 and August 17, Icelandic scientists detected a pair of earthquake swarms in and around the volcano.

The area north of Vatnajokull glacier has been closed, and a widespread evacuation order is in effect, in the wake of ongoing earthquake activity around the subglacial volcano Bardarbunga, which is located in the northwestern part of the glacier.

There is currently no immediate danger, but if the volcano erupts, a major flood is expected to the north, fed by melting ice from the glacier.

London Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre VAAC
The London VAAC is an International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) designated centre, responsible for issuing advisories for volcanic eruptions originating in Iceland and the north-eastern corner of the North Atlantic.

Updates

3/10/2014 15:00 Filming an active volcano, using a DJI Phantom Quadcopter 2 drone. See the full video: here



22/9/2014 9:30 This will be the last update unless activity increases
Seismic activity has been persistent, but at comparably low levels during the last hours. Since midnight around 10 earthquakes have been automatically detected on the caldera rim of Bįršarbunga. Another around 10 earthquakes were detected in the northern part of the dyke intrusion, all smaller than magnitude 2. Yesterday (21 September), between 19:00 and 24:00, 25 earthquakes were measured: 8 at Bįršarbunga, 13 at the northern end of the dyke and 2 at Heršubreiš. Earthquakes over M3.0 at Baršarbunga between19:00 21 September and 06:00 22 September:
at 19:51 M3,5
at 20:07 M3,7
at 23:08 M3,5
at 00:19 M3.6
at 03:13 M3.7
at 05:28 M3.5
The volcanic activity at the eruption site appears to be stable, based on webcam observations this morning.

21/9/2014 9:30
Last evening (19:00-24:00) about 30 earthquakes were detected, 10 at Bįršarbunga, 10 at the northern end of the intrusion and 5 at Heršubreiš and Heršubreišartögl (Töglin). The largest one was at Bįršarbunga at 22:46 3.9 and five more in the same area were over 3 in size.
From midnight til morning (24:00-07:00), automatically detected events are also around 30, most of them around northwestern Vatnajökull. The four largest events were all in northern part of Bįršarbunga caldera:
at 00:57 magnitude 4.8
at 02:21 magnitude 3.8
at 03:05 magnitude 3.7
at 03:30 magnitude 3.4
No visible changes in eruption at Holuhraun from webcams.

20/9/2014 9:40
Around 30 earthquakes have been automatically detected around northwestern Vatnajökull since midnight. Of these, around 10 were located on the Bįršarbunga caldera rim and another 15 in the northern end of the dyke intrusion. The strongest event was a magnitude 5.1 on the north-eastern caldera rim at 01:10.

19/9/2014 9:40
Since 19h yesterday evening only about 10 earthquakes were recorded at the Bardarbunga caldera and only 3 from midnight until 06:00 this morning. One, with magnitude 4.5 occurred at the northern rim of the caldera at 21:43. Two other earthquakes with magnitude over 3 occurred there at 23:44 and 01:57. At 06:44 this morning an earthquake of magnitude 4.7 occurred at the northeastern rim of the Bardarbunga caldera.

18/9/2014 10:45
The largest earthquakes recorded in Bardarbunga since 19:00 yesterday. A magnitude 3.2 earthquake occurred at 22:28, M4.1 earthquake at 22:52 , M3.5 at 23:35, M4.5, at 03:17 and M3.4 at 06:05. From midnight 13 earthquakes have been detected in Bįršarbunga, about 27 in the northern part of the dyke and around 20 by Heršubreiš and Heršubreišartögl, all below magnitude 2.

17/9/2014 10:00
The largest earthquakes recorded in Bįršarbunga since 19h yesterday occurred in the evening. A magnitude 4.8 earthquake occurred at 20:20 and a 5.4 earthquake at 21:34. From midnight 40 earthquakes have been recorded: 5 in Bįršarbunga, about 15 in the northern part of the dyke and around 20 by Heršubreiš and Heršubreišartögl, all below magnitude 2.

16/9/2014 22:50
Nearly 100 earthquakes have occurred since midnight. Just over 20 at Bįršarbunga and over 30 in the intrusion under Dyngjujökull and near the eruptive site. Earthquakes at the northern rim of Bįršarbunga caldera today were at 09:13 M3,4 and at 10:36 M4,8 and at 16:13 M3,7. At the southwestern rim there was an earthquake at 14:47 M5,2
""
The eruption site in Holuhraun at 18:40 today, 16 September 2014. Photo: Freysteinn Sigmundsson.

15/9/2014 09:00
No major changes are observed in the seismicity. 23 events were measured near Bįršarbunga and the dyke, of these nine occurred in Bįršarbunga. This rate is similar as two nights ago. The largest events were of magnitude M3.6 at 00:11 and M3.7 at 00:14 at the southern rim. Another one occurred at 02:27, M3.4 (size not confirmed yet) at the western rim. Swarms at Heršubreiš, Heršubreišartögl and Dreki continue (around 15 events in these areas in total). Eruption continues at Holuhraun.

14/9/2014 11:00
No major events have occurred since midnight, the largest events were at 01:47 M 3.5 and at 06:54 M 4.0 at the south- and southeastern rim of Bįršarbunga. According to webcam the eruption in Holuhraun still continues on one central crater (Baugur). The vertical displacement of the GPS-instrument on the ice-shelf at Bįršarbunga is around -20 cm from midnight.

13/9/2014 10:00
Since midnight, around 20 earthquakes have been recorded in the north-west region of Vatnajökull. Earthquake locations are similar to recent days: in Bįršarbunga, in the dyke intrusion near to the edge of Dyngjujökull, and occasionally at Heršubreišartögl.

12/9/2014 10:00
Thirty earthquakes have been recorded, mostly located in the dyke under Dyngjujökull and at the eruption site, and at the northern rim of Bįršarbunga. The largest earthquakes are around magnitude 2. A few earthquakes have occurred by Askja, Heršubreišartögl and Tungnafellsjökull.

11/9/2014 09:05
Earthquake activity is continuing in Bįršarbunga and in the northern part of the dike intrusion. The largest events occurred just after midnight (00:07:38, M5.3) at the southern caldera rim of Bįršarbunga and around five o'clock (05:00:38 of M4.3 and 05:04:49 of M3,0) at the northern rim of Bįršarbunga. Eruption is still ongoing.

10/9/2014 10:00
Earthquake activity is continuing in Bįršarbunga and in the northern part of the dike intrusion. Fewer events were detected at Heršubreišartögl. Eruption continues north of Dyngjujökull.

09/9/2014 22:30
Since this morning, 230 earthquakes have been recorded. The main activity has been in the northern part of the dyke, north of Heršubreiš, by Heršubreišartögl and at the rim of Bįršarbunga. No earthquakes larger than magnitude 3 have been recorded since 01:07.

08/9/2014 13:30
The earthquake activity today continues at the northern part of the dyke intrusion. The largest earthquake in the dyke since the end of August occurred at 16:27 today with magnitude 4.5. An earthquake swarm is taking place north of Heršubreiš. About 80 earthquakes have been recorded so far today
The earthquake activity since midnight continues at the northern part of the dyke intrusions and at Bįršarbunga. Between 30 and 40 events have been located in the area since midnight.

07/9/2014 18:30
The lava tongue now extends 11 km to the north and has reached the western main branch of Jökulsį į Fjöllum river.
Earthquake activity continues in Bįršarbunga, in the northern part of the dike intrusion and in Heršubreišartögl. Total of 70 earthquakes have been detected since midnight, the largest M5,7 at 07:08 in the Bįršarbunga caldera. The lava has reached Jökulsį į Fjöllum. Steaming occurs.

06/9/2014 15:25
The surveillance flight yesterday the ice-surface at Bįršarbunga was measured with the radar system of Isavia's aircraft. The measurements show large changes on the ice-surface. Up to 15 m subsidence has occurred in the centre of the caldera, which corresponds to a volume change of 0.25 km³. The shape of the subsidence area is in accordance with the elevation of the caldera floor having lowered by that amount. The most probable explanation is that this subsidence is related to the recent high seismic activity and subsurface magma flow to the northeast.
Earthquakes have been recorded in similar locations as in recent days: in Bįršarbunga, in the dyke intrusion beneath and north of Dyngjujökull and occasionally at Heršubreišartögl. At 05:40, an earthquake of magnitude 5 occurred on the rim of the Bįršarbunga caldera. Since midnight, the total number of automatically located earthquakes is around 50

05/9/2014 09:20
Two earthquakes of magnitude 4.3 and 5.2 occurred on the rim of the Bįršarbunga caldera. The first earthquake was recorded at 23:33 yesterday and the larger event at 01:19.
Toxic gases from the Holuhraun eruption have been measured up to six kilometers (four miles) high. Mostly it contains sulfur dioxide and scientists found some poisoning effect in the first day of the eruption. Up to now forty million cubic meters (1.200 million cubic feet) of lava have come out of the craters in Holuhraun.

04/9/2014 07:00
Since August 16th, 13 earthquakes have measured over 5 in magnitude.

03/9/2014 12:00
Seismic activity continued at similar rate as yesterday until 03:09 when M5.5 earthquake was measured in northern part of Bardarbunga. After that there was increase in activity both in the area under the northern part of Dyngjujokull, south of the current eruption site as well as in Herdubreidartogl. The Aviation Colour Code for Bįršarbunga remains at ‘orange' and the code for Askja at ‘yellow'.

02/9/2014 12:00
A noticeable decrease in seismicity has occurred during the last 24 hours. The level of activity is approximately half of that during recent days.
Volcanic activity in Holuhraun continues at steady rate. According to webcam observation there is no visible change in activity since yesterday with effusive lava eruption and fountains.

01/9/2014 19:00
Since midnight over 700 earthquakes have been detected automatically which is somewhat fewer than in the past few days. The main activity is in the dyke. Two earthquakes occurred by the northern rim of the Bardarbunga caldera, at 08:58 AM M5.0 and 11:41 AM M5.3. Over 140 earthquakes were detected by Heršubreišartögl, NE of Askja volcano. A few earthquakes were detected near Askja.

31/8/2014

31/8/2014 The new eruption in Holuhraun at 07:15. Video: Benedikt G. Ófeigsson.

The Aviation Colour Code for Bįršarbunga was raised at ‘red' this morning and it has been moved back to 'orange' since 15:00 UTC. The color code for Askja is at ‘yellow'.

30/8/2014 Around 450 earthquakes have been detected since midnight 29/30 August until 07:00, the vast majority in the northern part of the dike intrusion Several events have been detected on the caldera rim of Bįršarbunga, strongest were M4.5 at 02:35 and M4.2 at 06:18, both on the northern rim. A magnitude M5.4 earthquake occurred at 07:03 at the southern rim of Bįršarbunga caldera. Several events of similar size have occurred around the caldera rim in recent days.
Summarizing, no significant changes in seismic activity have been observed.
Update
Icelandic authorities briefly raised the aviation warning code to red Friday after a small fissure eruption near Bardarbunga volcano, but no volcanic ash was detected by the radar system.

29/8/2014
Earthquake activity is high
At 11:14:59 AM (29 August) an earthquake of M4.8 occurred by the northern rim og the Bardarbunga caldera.

And yesterday
Size Time Location
5.0 28 Aug 08:13:40 7.3 km ENE of Bįršarbunga
4.8 29 Aug 11:14:59 4.9 km NE of Bįršarbunga
4.1 28 Aug 01:30:52 6.8 km E of Bįršarbunga


24/8/2014
Iceland lowered its aviation alert level to orange from red Sunday, saying there was no sign of an imminent eruption at the Bardarbunga volcano. And scientists at the Icelandic Meteorological Office said their announcement Saturday that the volcano had experienced a subglacial eruption was wrong.

An orange alert indicates “heightened or escalating unrest with increased potential of eruption.”

23/8/2014
Icelandic Met Office:
A small sub-glacial volcanic eruption has started near Bardarbunga volcano, under the icecap of Dyngjujökull glacier in the northern part of Vatnajökull glacier, according to the Icelandic Met Office. All air traffic is now prohibited in a large radius around the volcano.

21/8/2014
The intense earthquake swarm continues with no significant changes. There are no signs of magma migrating towards or reaching the surface are present, although the risk of a subglacial eruption in the near future remains high.