It’s the one outside Grindavik, a town in the southwestern portion of the country that was evacuated recently due to an earthquake storm, which led to scientists concluding that this is coming.
There are several YouTube livestreams; so far, airlines are not diverting.
I wonder whether the people who had to evacuate will ever be able to go home.
Also, isn’t there a geothermal power plant relatively nearby? I wonder if that’s had to shut down.
ETA: Oh-oh – found this with a Google search:
The fissure was near the nearby Svartsengi geothermal power plant, The New York Times reported. “We are looking at a worst-case scenario,” Thorvaldur Thordarson, a volcanologist in Iceland, told the newspaper. “The eruption appears big, and only about two kilometers from major infrastructure.”
Authorities said they were preparing to construct a large dyke designed to divert lava flows around the Svartsengi geothermal power plant, located just over 6 kilometres (4 miles) from Grindavik.
Justice Minister Gudrun Hafsteinsdottir told state broadcaster RUV that equipment and materials that could fill 20,000 trucks were being moved to the plant.
I remember the footage from the Canary Island a couple years ago where the lava overtook incredibly large palm trees, basically cooking them from the bottom, and turned the contents of a big swimming pool to steam.
My brother in law was working at the eruption in La Palma. He is a firefighter from another island but they were taking everybody over there to do rotations.
He says he had never been so scared in his life (but then, isn’t bravery precisely the ability to function and do your job no matter how scared you might be…?)
AFAICT, it’s called Sundhnúkur.
(I don’t know how to pronounce it, but it’s got to be easier to
pronounce than Eyjafjallajökull !)
Not so much a volcano as a long fissure.
I saw some very impressive footage of the event on the news last night. After reading an article about it, I came away with the impression that volcanologists were still having problems predicting the strength and duration of these events.
Yes. And a fearless firefighter could easily end up dead and be a threat to his colleagues. For many years firefighters were expected to pointlessly die in order to keep fighting a losing battle. In recent years there’s been more awareness that dead firefighters aren’t very effective.
Last I saw in the updates I’m following there’s a possibility this could go on for months, with the lava reservoir filling up, erupting, dying down again, filling up, erupting…
Or it could be largely over now and things will just cool down and solidify.
We know more about volcanoes than we did a generation ago but there’s still a huge amount we don’t know.