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Judi Lynn

(160,682 posts)
Thu Jul 20, 2023, 06:23 PM Jul 2023

Watch as crater collapses in Iceland's new volcano, spewing rivers of lava

By Kiley Price published about 4 hours ago

Iceland's newest volcano, located in the Reykjanes peninsula, began erupting in early July, 2023. Now it's throwing "spatter bombs'" of molten lava.

- image at link -

(Video credit: Video courtesy of the National Icelandic Broadcasting Service)

In Iceland, the world's newest "baby" volcano is throwing a temper tantrum: It's overflowing and spewing "spatter bombs," or blobs of molten lava, into the surrounding crater.

The volcano formed on July 10, when an underground eruption opened a 1.7-mile-long (2.7 kilometers) fissure in the ground of Iceland's Reykjanes peninsula, southwest of the capital, Reykjavík. Leading up to this event, the region experienced a "seismic swarm," during which more than 7,000 earthquakes shook the area starting on July 4, according to a statement from the Icelandic Met Office. Lava trickled from the fracture in the ground, and seismic activity decreased for about a week after the eruption.

On July 18, however, "there was a major shift in the vent activity overnight," according to a post on the Facebook page of Rannsóknarstofa í eldfjallafræði og náttúruvá (the Laboratory of Volcanology and Natural Hazards), a research group from the University of Iceland. At around 11:30 p.m. local time, "the crater filled up to the brim with lava and the fountaining began to throw spatter bombs well beyond the crater rims." Roughly three hours later, a small opening formed, allowing lava to spill over the crater, the post added. By early morning, a section of the crater's rim had collapsed, releasing a river of lava to the north and west. The lava pouring from this crater is roughly 2,192 degrees Fahrenheit (1,200 degrees Celsius), the scientists said.

"The crater became unstable and collapsed," Ingibjörg Jónsdóttir, an associate professor of geography at the University of Iceland and member of the lab, told Live Science in an email. "It had built up quite fast and it was filling up with lava on the inside, causing pressure to the walls. Not unusual as such but spectacular and of concern since there were people quite close by not long before it happened (in a closed area though)."

More:
https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/volcanos/watch-as-crater-collapses-in-icelands-new-volcano-spewing-rivers-of-lava

(Image better seen "full screen." )

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Watch as crater collapses in Iceland's new volcano, spewing rivers of lava (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jul 2023 OP
No image at link, here's one that works... 2naSalit Jul 2023 #1
Link worked fine for me. It starts up automatically. GreenWave Jul 2023 #2
Worked for me too. Duppers Jul 2023 #4
Thanks for posting SCantiGOP Jul 2023 #3

SCantiGOP

(13,878 posts)
3. Thanks for posting
Thu Jul 20, 2023, 09:06 PM
Jul 2023

I keep a link on my computer to watch these live streams, but that was something you don’t see often.

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