Iceland earthquakes, 18000 in a week Fagradalsfjall Volcano

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Iceland has experienced an unprecedented 18,000 earthquakes in a week, indicating potential volcanic activity after 800 years of dormancy in the Fagradalsfjall region. The Icelandic Met Office has reported increasing seismicity on the Reykjanes Peninsula, with recent earthquakes reaching magnitudes of 5.2 and 5.4. An eruption began on March 19, 2021, at Geldingadalur, confirmed by thermal satellite imagery and local reports. The aviation color code has been elevated to red, and precautions have been taken, including road closures near the eruption site. Experts suggest that the current volcanic activity is minor, with no explosive eruptions expected.
  • #51
Cameras are moved periodically, so it's hard to tell which cone one is observing. They keep producing lava.

This evening, one of the cones of Geldingadalir seen from Fagradalsfjall, Iceland.
 

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  • #52
My son and I made it during the easter vacations to Island and also managed to visit the volcano! It was the first active volcano we ever saw, what an experience! It is very impressive to also hear the splashing sounds of the lava when it falls back after being erupted. What is somewhat hard to judge from the pictures are the dimensions of the lava fields, especially their height.
How to get there?

My son and I recovered from a Covid infection last year, so with a medical certificate, we could enter Island without any further tests (in the meantime, you are required to take one on immigration) and also didn't have to pass through quarantine. The same applies for persons with full immunization. Other persons need a test before taking the plane, on immigration and after, I think 4 days of quarantine. The regulations also depend on your region of origin and risk status of your country.

The volcano is only at few kilometers from the international airport Keflavík, so eventually you can get a car directly at the airport.

We visited the volcano starting from Reykjavik using the "volcano bus" by Reykjavik excursions:
https://www.re.is/tour/volcano-bus/ which brings you directly to the most proximate point accessible by car (they were constructing feverishly parking lots there at the time) . From there you have to hike about 1,5 to 2 hours to the volcano. I am not an experienced hiker and thanked God for the walking sticks I had brought. Make sure to go well equiped (hiking boots etc.) and bring some proviant.
The trail is hard to miss as it is marked and there are always hundreds of persons on the trail a difficult hill slope is secured with a cord to hold on. Civil protection have a large ambulance tent set on the top of one of the hills, so this is quite a secure hiking trail.
The bus left at 11h in the morning from Reykjavik and we were picked up again in the evening which also carried the persons who had booked the evening tour. I was quite glad we hadn't booked the evening tour as I am not sure if I would have made the return trip in darkness with a headlight only. Of course it must be even more spectacular to see the volcano in the darkness.
 
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  • #53
Three active volcano vents. The speaker gives a warning about the gas in the area.

No. 1 volcano is the first cone (southernmost), No. 2 is the second cone (northernmost, which has become the largest) and No. 3 is the small cone between 1 and 2.



 
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  • #54
The videos are mesmerizing. My wife compared looking at them to staring into the flames of a campfire. If we lived in Iceland, I'm sure we would be among the people hiking out there to see it first hand.

I'm surprised at how long those lava rivers retain their heat. The energy radiates upward, it warms the bedrock underneath, and it causes air currents and even vortices. But the surface gets covered by solidified material and lava tubes can form, insulating the material underneath from the sky.

I would love to see a thermal analysis of the dynamics. Can anyone suggest a source?
 
  • #55
anorlunda said:
I would love to see a thermal analysis of the dynamics. Can anyone suggest a source?
I'm sure one will come out some time.

In the meantime, other areas have been analyzed.

New Insights for Detecting and Deriving Thermal Properties of Lava Flow Using Infrared Satellite during 2014–2015 Effusive Eruption at Holuhraun, Iceland
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/1/151/htm

Heat transfer in volcanic settings: Application to lava-ice interaction and geothermal areas
https://notendur.hi.is/mtg/nemritg/BO-PhD_2016.pdf

Thermal conductivity of supraglacial volcanic deposits in Iceland
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00531-020-01820-0

The problem with those studies is that the composition, and thus thermal conductivity, may be different.
 
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  • #56
I sometimes take a sequence of screen captures to see how the volcano vents behave.

Image of the volcano in Geldingadalir, seen from Langihryggur, Iceland. The activity varies considerable to little lava flow with mostly vapor to some significant bursts of lava and rock.
 

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  • #57
The initial vent (at Geldingadalir viewed from Fagradalsfjall) over 17 days from March 20 through April 5, when the new fissure opened to the northnortheast (NNE). Basically the valley is filled now with new black basaltic lava. The other valley to the east, Meradalir, is being filled by the new vents, which also seem fill some of the valley of Geldingadalir.

 
  • #58
Apparently dikes, or walls, were built to stop the flow of lava from the valleys in Iceland, and apparently a lot of lava is still flowing out of the volcanoes, or cones, in Geldingadalir and Meradalir.



A spectacular geyser of lava.
 
  • #59
Astronuc said:
Apparently dikes, or walls, were built to stop the flow of lava from the valleys in Iceland, and apparently a lot of lava is still flowing out of the volcanoes, or cones, in Geldingadalir and Meradalir.
Lava is like elephants and the sea. It goes where it want to. Don't bet on the people who think they can stop it. :wink:
 
  • #60
anorlunda said:
Lava is like elephants and the sea. It goes where it want to. Don't bet on the people who think they can stop it. :wink:
In the past, the Icelanders stopped a lava flow by spraying water on the lava field. In the remote valleys of Geldingadalir and Meradalir, they don't have a water supply. They are concerned about infrastructure, e.g., road, houses and fiber optic cables through the area. All that would get buried by many meters of lava if it keeps flowing to the sea.

Maybe they could create a channel to send it where they want it, or would do the least damage.
 
  • #61
Astronuc said:
Maybe they could create a channel to send it where they want it, or would do the least damage.
Attempts at this have been tried.
Here is a nice little article about it.

In some situations, there is not a lot you can do.
In the recent Kilauea eruption, a lot of the lava flows were in little valleys between the hardened remnants of previous flows. Lava flows can be 30 or 40 feet above the surrounding terrain, as the edges cool enough to harden and the lava backs up behind it. Therefore there are often little valleys between the old flows so new lava tends to go there.
 
  • #62
A new report today. It seems that unlike water, lava sometimes flows uphill.

 
  • #63
The volcano is producing huge volume of lava. I think early on, it was something like 3 to 5 m3/s, but I hear a number that was like 8 to 13 m3/s from the largest vent (cone). I don't know if there is only one cone or still multiple leaks since apparently some of the older vents are now covered.



Geldingadalir: Iceland's newest volcano offers rare opportunities. There were 9 active vents, but only Vent 5 is now active.
 
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  • #64
This report today says that the scientists in Iceland now say that this eruption will continue for 100-300 years.

 
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  • #65
anorlunda said:
This report today says that the scientists in Iceland now say that this eruption will continue for 100-300 years.
I heard that yesterday. It's a new experience for contemporary scientists. Apparently, volcanologists and geochemists are trying to get to Iceland. I'd like to go myself.
 
  • #66
Astronuc said:
I'd like to go myself.
If you do go, be sure to include continuous trip reports in your plans!
 
  • #67
Astronuc said:
I'd like to go myself.
Me too. That gives us lots of time to save up fir the trip.
 
  • #68
This $1300 drone got a bit too close to the Fagradalsfjall volcano.



Earlier this month (DJI MAVIC 2 PRO and DJI FPV.)
 
  • #69
Monday, June 28, 2021 - Increased Volcanic Activity by Fagradalsfjall
https://icelandmonitor.mbl.is/news/...ncreased_volcanic_activity_by_fagradalsfjall/

A satellite picture taken Saturday shows much more volcanic activity than before at the eruption site by Fagradalsfjall, Southwest Iceland, mbl.is reports. If this development continues, lava will flow sooner than previously expected from Nátthagakriki valley over Suðurstrandarvegur road - an important road that connects the town of Grindavík and South Iceland.
Still going strong.



Wall in the Natthagi Valley! Iceland June 29 - valley is filling with lava
 
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  • #70
Evolution of the eruption in Iceland Geldingadalir



Evolution of volcano in Iceland Geldingadalir Pt. 2

 
  • #71
My family has added daily videos of that volcano to our routine; just like weather reports. Someday, it would be wonderful to go there to see it with our own eyes.

Below is a satellite picture, showing the extent of the lava. One branch is clearly heading toward the sea, but at the moment, most of the lava is heading NE. Unlike water heading downhill, lava cools and hardens, thus forming barriers. As it fills up a valley and hardens, it eventually forms a dam causing fresh lava to find another direction to flow. Another volcano in Iceland from the distant past is estimated to have produced 42 km3 of lava.

volcano.jpg
 
  • #72
anorlunda said:
My family has added daily videos of that volcano to our routine; just like weather reports. Someday, it would be wonderful to go there to see it with our own eyes.
Apparently, flights to Reykjavik are relatively inexpensive at the moment. I don't know about hotels though, or rental cars. I suppose one could hire a local.

Iceland Volcano Update - New Lava Barrier and Lava Flow Forecast (June 14) - one comment indicates the lava volume estimated at 63 M m3, 0.063 km3. The lava flow seems to be increasing and enroaching on a main road to the south of Natthagi Valley. Essentially, three valleys are getting filled.

From an older map in May.
 

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  • #73
Sat, 24 Jul 2021, 05:25 - Fagradalsfjall volcano (Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland): monthly eruption summary, activity seems to have slowed down
https://www.volcanodiscovery.com/fa...ruption-summary-activity-seems-to-have-s.html
Lava flow area
The lava flow area covered 3.96 square km.

Lava flow volume
Scientists estimate that approximately 96,1 million cubic meters of the lava have so far erupted from all vents. The lava flow has mostly accumulated in the Meradalir valley. No lava flows occurred in Geldingadalur, Nátthaga, and Syðri Meradalir valleys over the past two weeks.

Rock geochemistry
The graph shows the weight percent (wt.%) of magnesium oxide (MgO) (9,7%) and titanium oxide (TiO2) (9,9%) in the erupted magma.
So what is the balance? Silica?

https://en.vedur.is/volcanoes/fagradalsfjall-eruption/real-time-data/

How a volcano saved Iceland's travel industry
https://www.dw.com/en/how-a-volcano-saved-icelands-travel-industry/a-58217816
 
  • #74
As evenings are getting longer, I found some time to make some thin section slides of the lava which I collected at Fagradalsfjall. It contains long needles of plagioclase (sodium-calcium feldspar), augitic pyroxenes, some olivine and small black cubic magnetite crystals. This is quite what one would expect from a MORB (middle oceanic ridge basalt). The second picture is taken in linearly polarized light, the third one with crossed polarisator and analysator to bring out the birefringence induced colours. The fourth one is at higher magnification.
 

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  • #75
Astronuc said:
So what is the balance? Silica?
Strangely enough I did not succeed in finding some real analyses of the lava or basalt from Fagradalsfjall, So I'll try to present my own layman conclusions.
To begin with, the lava contains certainly little silica, because this would lead to a very high viscosity. If you watch the videos, you'll notice that it flows like water, so viscosity is really low.
This is also confirmed by inspection. The lava contains some olivine which is largely incompatible with free SiO2.
The microscopic analysis shows mainly plagioclase, clino- (~ MgCaSi2O6) and orthopyroxenes (~Mg2Si2O6) where Mg may be substituted by iron, and magnetite (Fe3O4), but no quartz or sanidine (K-feldspar). This is a typical composition for a Olivine-Tholeiite from mid-oceanic ridges, or oceanic islands. https://is.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basalt#/media/Mynd:Basalt_Tetrahedron.png
From some texts on the internet I infer that the magma is very primitive and stems directly from the asthenosphere, which is in line with the composition found.
 
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  • #76
DrDu said:
The microscopic analysis shows mainly plagioclase, clino- (~ MgCaSi2O6) and orthopyroxenes (~Mg2Si2O6) where Mg may be substituted by iron, and magnetite (Fe3O4), but no quartz or sanidine (K-feldspar).
So, bascially, a dark, fine-grained basalt composed largely of plagioclase with pyroxene and olivine?
 
  • #77
Yes!
 
  • #78
In the debris of the basalt, I found one small splinter of olivine, whose optical properties I measured yesterday on a spindle stage attached to the microscope. Check
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/339054634_steven_guidebook
for a description of the technique.
The olivine has an angle 2V_x between the two optical axes of 89.15 degrees and is optically negative. The axis angle is a monotonous function of the forsterite content of the olivine (W. E. Tröger, Optische Bestimmung der Gesteinsbildenden Minerale, Part 1 Bestimmungstabellen) from which an forsterite content of about 85 % is inferred.
This is quite in line with the values reported for various icelandic basalts in https://academic.oup.com/petrology/article/54/4/745/1548250
which range from 78.1 to 90.2 % Forsterite.
Of course my measurement was made on one crystal, only, so that the statistics is rather poor :-)
 
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  • #79
Here a picture of the olivine between crossed polarizers. Note the interference colours due to the strong birefringence.
 

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  • #80
Fagradalsfjall in Geldingadalur is still producing.

Live camera has been discontinued
 
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  • #81
Wow! How far is the camera from the volcano and hot might it be at that spot?

The camera conveys the feeling of being close but being safe which means its likely not safe at all if the volcano erupted.
 
  • #82
jedishrfu said:
Wow! How far is the camera from the volcano and hot might it be at that spot?

The camera conveys the feeling of being close but being safe which means its likely not safe at all if the volcano erupted.
I believe the cameras are some km from the fissures and up-hill. The close up views are done with zoom lens. The cameras have been moved back from the original site as new fissures opened closer to the cameras.

https://www.camscape.com/webcam/fagradalsfjall-erupting-volcano-webcam/
 
  • #83
During vacations I found some time to look at the plagioclase in the basalt under the microscope using a so-called "universal stage" which allows to rotate the thin section around 4 axes, see the picture. This makes it possible to determine the orientations of the principal optical axes relative to some characteristic crystal faces.

As these orientations are known as a function of the composition of the plagioclase, namely the albite (NaAlSi3O8)-anorthite (CaAl2Si2O8) ratio, it is possible to estimate this ratio quite accurately without the necessity to do a chemical analysis or a X-ray microprobe analysis. It turned out that the plagioclase is about 95% anorthite, which is what one would expect for a MORB.

In comparison to albite, anorthite contains less SiO2 and is therefore said to be more basic. The low SiO2 content means that the temperature, where crystals begin to form in the lava is quite high, and the viscosity of the lava is low. This is in line with pictures where the lava can be seen to flow like water. The high anorthite content also points to the lava being quite primitve, meaning that it is still quite similar to the primary magma that formed when the mantle material melted.

So quite a lot can already be learned about this kind of rocks without high-tech equipment.
 

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  • #84
Lava is erupting again on the Reykjanes Peninsula in the Meradalir Valley less than a year after is stopped in the initial eruption at Fagradalsfjall. According to National Geographic, "The latest eruption, which started at 1:18 p.m. local time on August 3, opened up at a fissure only a few hundred feet away from the cone crafted by last year’s volcanic outburst."

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/...-be-the-start-of-decades-of-volcanic-activity

https://icelandmonitor.mbl.is/news/...g_news_volcanic_eruption_in_the_reykjanes_pe/

The eruption in Meradalir could be 5-10 times stronger than last year
https://icelandmonitor.mbl.is/news/...ption_in_meradalir_could_be_5_10_times_stron/
 
  • #85

Recent findings from Iceland's Fagradalsfjall eruptions change what we know about how volcanoes work (well some volcanoes)​

https://phys.org/news/2022-09-iceland-fagradalsfjall-eruptions-volcanoes.html

. . . We can think of the Earth's mantle—from the top of the core to under the tectonic plates—operating much like a lava lamp." As the heat causes regions of the mantle to rise and plumes form and move buoyantly upward toward the surface, he explained, molten rock from these plumes accumulates in chambers and crystallizes, gases escape through the crust and the pressure builds until the magma finds a way to escape.

For the first few weeks, as described in the paper, what erupted was the expected "depleted" magma type that had been accumulating in the reservoir, located about 10 miles (16 km) below the surface. But by April, evidence showed that the chamber was being recharged by deeper, "enriched" type melts with a different composition that were sourced from a different region of the upwelling mantle plume beneath Iceland. This new magma had a less modified chemical composition, with a higher magnesium content and a higher proportion of carbon dioxide gas, indicating that fewer gases from this deeper magma had escaped. By May, the magma that dominated the flow was the deeper, enriched type. These rapid, extreme changes in magma composition at a plume-fed hotspot, they say, "have never before been observed in near real-time."

These changes in composition may not be so rare, Jackson said; it's just that opportunities to sample eruptions at such an early stage are not common. For example, prior to the 2021 Fagradalsfjall eruption, the most recent eruptions on Iceland's Reykjanes peninsula occurred eight centuries ago. He suspects that this new activity signal the start of a new, possibly centuries-long volcanic cycle in southwest Iceland.

Sæmundur A. Halldórsson et al, Rapid shifting of a deep magmatic source at Fagradalsfjall volcano, Iceland, Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04981-x

Abstract​

Recent Icelandic rifting events have illuminated the roles of centralized crustal magma reservoirs and lateral magma transport1,2,3,4, important characteristics of mid-ocean ridge magmatism1,5. A consequence of such shallow crustal processing of magmas4,5https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-04981-x#ref-CR5 is the overprinting of signatures that trace the origin, evolution and transport of melts in the uppermost mantle and lowermost crust6,7. Here we present unique insights into processes occurring in this zone from integrated petrologic and geochemical studies of the 2021 Fagradalsfjall eruption on the Reykjanes Peninsula in Iceland. Geochemical analyses of basalts erupted during the first 50 days of the eruption, combined with associated gas emissions, reveal direct sourcing from a near-Moho magma storage zone. Geochemical proxies, which signify different mantle compositions and melting conditions, changed at a rate unparalleled for individual basaltic eruptions globally. Initially, the erupted lava was dominated by melts sourced from the shallowest mantle but over the following three weeks became increasingly dominated by magmas generated at a greater depth. This exceptionally rapid trend in erupted compositions provides an unprecedented temporal record of magma mixing that filters the mantle signal, consistent with processing in near-Moho melt lenses containing 107–108 m3 of basaltic magma.
 
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  • #86
Well a year and a bit later and my wife and I finally got to Iceland. A geologists/volcanologists paradise.
The tour took us down the SE side of the Reykjanes Peninsula to Grindavik.
We got a glimps of the black lava flows from the road, that came from the Fagradalsfjall eruption, prior to arriving in Grindavik and then on to the Blue Lagoon for a wonderful swim in the thermal pools. Will add some photos once I have finished doing editing of several 1000 photos

cheers
Dave
 
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  • #87
What used to be a valley around Fagradalsfjall is now a lava field named Fagradalshraun.
Volcanic eruptions in Iceland lead scientists to startling discoveries | 60 Minutes

 
  • #89
https://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/earthquake-activity-in-fagradalsfjall-area

Updated 5. July 2023 at 2:30pm

Earthquake activity commenced around 14:00 UTC yesterday (4 July 2023) beneath the Fagradalsfjall regionon the Reykjanes Peninsula, followed by an intense seismic swarm at 16:30 whichis still continuing. By noon today ~2200 earthquakes have occurred since the onset of this activity.
 
  • #90
Latest update

 
  • #91
davenn said:
Latest update
Interesting comment about the uplift of a wide area in the peninsula. The author suggests a great eruption than before.
 
  • #92
  • #93
Rive said:
... already a live webcam for the event o0)

Yes, they were real quick getting them up and running again a couple of days ago.
I still has them bookmarked/subscribed in Youtube from recent years

Other webcams views ---

Views from Perlan in Reykjavík, Iceland​



Langihryggur - Live from Iceland ( click on the Watch on YT link)​



Reykjanes - Norður​



Reykjanes Suður​



Geldingadalir, Iceland LIVE! Keilir​

 
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  • #95
Smoke (or, maybe just steam) on the live cameras :wink:
 
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  • #96
Rive said:
Smoke (or, maybe just steam) on the live cameras :wink:
Steam and sulfur dioxide, and probably CO2
  • A lava-producing fissure eruption is occurring closeto Litli-Hrútur mountain on the Reykjanes Peninsula.
  • The eruption is occurring in an uninhabited areaand it poses no immediate dangers to infrastructure.
  • The intensity of the eruption has decreasedconsiderably during the first 24 hours
  • Volcanic ash is not being produced by theeruption.
  • Close to the eruption, the main hazards are incandescent,flowing lava and volcanic gases.
  • Gas measurements at the eruption site during thefirst hours show levels similar to the 2022 eruption.
  • Flowing lava could also cause localised grassfires, which will further contribute to poor air quality close to the eruption site.

https://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/earthquake-activity-in-fagradalsfjall-areahttps://volcano.si.edu/volcano.cfm?vn=371032
Seismicity intensified during 3-4 July. An earthquake swarm began at 1400 on 4 July and more than 1,600 earthquakes were detected beneath Fagradalsfjall, in the vicinity of the July 2022 dike intrusion, by mid-morning on 5 July. The earthquake locations became shallower within the first few hours of the swarm and by 5 July were at depths of 2-3 km. Seven of the earthquakes were above M 4, with the largest being M 4.6 recorded at 0821 on 5 July. At 1055 on 5 July IMO raised the Aviation Color Code to Orange (the third level on a four-color scale).
So looking at the video of the Litli-Hrútur eruption, one can see lava spewing from the fissure.Edit/update: Volcanic eruption has started near Litli-Hrútur
https://icelandmonitor.mbl.is/news/news/2023/07/10/volcanic_eruption_has_started_near_litli_hrutur/

Edit/update2:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/ne...ic-eruption-spewing-noxious-fumes/ar-AA1dHTO8
 
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