Comparable to Vesuvius and St. Helens eruptions By Kristján Már Unnarsson 24. september 2014 10:30 Mount St. Helens, Vesuvius and Holuhraun. The as-of-yet-unnamed eruption north of the Vatnajökull glacier has reached a higher category on the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) and is now considered to be VEI 5. Such eruptions are rare and on average tend to occur once every ten years or so. As a result the caldera under the Dyngjujökull glacier is now comparable to some of the most famous volcanic eruptions in human history, for example the Vesuvius eruption in 79 A.D. that destroyed the city of Pompeii and the eruption of St. Helens in 1980 in Washington State in the U.S. which killed 57 people. The VEI was made by the U.S. Geological Survey and is based on the volume of volcanic products from the eruption. In the next category above, VEI 6, we find the Krakatoa eruption of 1883 and the Pinatubo eruption of 1991. Above that, in VEI 7, we have the Tambora Eruption of 1815, the most destructive eruption in the recorded history of mankind. Mankind has yet to witness a VEI 8 eruption, the highest category there is, but among those is counted an eruption under Yellowstone Park which is believed to have occurred around 640 thousand years ago. In the next category below, VEI 4, we can find many known eruptions, among them the Eyjafjallajökull eruption of 2010. News in English Tengdar fréttir Bárðarbunga eruption may reveal plane wreckage On September 14th 1950 the plane Geysir went on its last voyage. 22. september 2014 13:46 Video: Scientists move burning lava into a pot Scientists at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the University of Iceland are still very much at work at the lava field Holuhraun north of Vatnajökull. They have released a video which shows them transferring burning hot lava into a pot and cooling it with water. 24. september 2014 08:53 The new lava would fill all buildings in Iceland and then some "It's already bigger than the entire Krafla episode,“ says Ármann Höskuldsson, volcanologist at the University of Iceland. 17. september 2014 13:21 Pele´s hair: A fascinating phenomenon created by the volcano It was noticed blowing all around the fissure, but no one could explain or understand why. It looks like tufts of hair and feels like glass wool. 10. september 2014 13:45 Holuhraun eruption about to exceed 1947 eruption The lavaflow from the caldera is equal to the waterflow of the Þjórsá river. 23. september 2014 13:13 Mest lesið Nýbakaðar mæður í felum því þær viti hvernig kerfið virkar Innlent Hófu frumkvæðisathugun í kjölfar umfjöllunar Kveiks Innlent Lést í sprengingunni Innlent Íbúakosning væri einföld sáttaleið í Skagafirði Innlent „Stundum þarftu að auka spennuna til að draga úr spennunni“ Erlent Trump og Starmer ræddu Hormuz-sund Erlent Hundur fékk tafarlausa þjónustu en krabbameinssjúk kona beið mánuðum saman Innlent Fannst ellefu mínútum síðar með stunguvopn og blóðugar hendur Innlent Snekkju skattsvikarans meinuð hafnarkoma á Akureyri Innlent Hinir treystu sér ekki en Íslendingarnir flugu Innlent
The as-of-yet-unnamed eruption north of the Vatnajökull glacier has reached a higher category on the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) and is now considered to be VEI 5. Such eruptions are rare and on average tend to occur once every ten years or so. As a result the caldera under the Dyngjujökull glacier is now comparable to some of the most famous volcanic eruptions in human history, for example the Vesuvius eruption in 79 A.D. that destroyed the city of Pompeii and the eruption of St. Helens in 1980 in Washington State in the U.S. which killed 57 people. The VEI was made by the U.S. Geological Survey and is based on the volume of volcanic products from the eruption. In the next category above, VEI 6, we find the Krakatoa eruption of 1883 and the Pinatubo eruption of 1991. Above that, in VEI 7, we have the Tambora Eruption of 1815, the most destructive eruption in the recorded history of mankind. Mankind has yet to witness a VEI 8 eruption, the highest category there is, but among those is counted an eruption under Yellowstone Park which is believed to have occurred around 640 thousand years ago. In the next category below, VEI 4, we can find many known eruptions, among them the Eyjafjallajökull eruption of 2010.
News in English Tengdar fréttir Bárðarbunga eruption may reveal plane wreckage On September 14th 1950 the plane Geysir went on its last voyage. 22. september 2014 13:46 Video: Scientists move burning lava into a pot Scientists at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the University of Iceland are still very much at work at the lava field Holuhraun north of Vatnajökull. They have released a video which shows them transferring burning hot lava into a pot and cooling it with water. 24. september 2014 08:53 The new lava would fill all buildings in Iceland and then some "It's already bigger than the entire Krafla episode,“ says Ármann Höskuldsson, volcanologist at the University of Iceland. 17. september 2014 13:21 Pele´s hair: A fascinating phenomenon created by the volcano It was noticed blowing all around the fissure, but no one could explain or understand why. It looks like tufts of hair and feels like glass wool. 10. september 2014 13:45 Holuhraun eruption about to exceed 1947 eruption The lavaflow from the caldera is equal to the waterflow of the Þjórsá river. 23. september 2014 13:13 Mest lesið Nýbakaðar mæður í felum því þær viti hvernig kerfið virkar Innlent Hófu frumkvæðisathugun í kjölfar umfjöllunar Kveiks Innlent Lést í sprengingunni Innlent Íbúakosning væri einföld sáttaleið í Skagafirði Innlent „Stundum þarftu að auka spennuna til að draga úr spennunni“ Erlent Trump og Starmer ræddu Hormuz-sund Erlent Hundur fékk tafarlausa þjónustu en krabbameinssjúk kona beið mánuðum saman Innlent Fannst ellefu mínútum síðar með stunguvopn og blóðugar hendur Innlent Snekkju skattsvikarans meinuð hafnarkoma á Akureyri Innlent Hinir treystu sér ekki en Íslendingarnir flugu Innlent
Bárðarbunga eruption may reveal plane wreckage On September 14th 1950 the plane Geysir went on its last voyage. 22. september 2014 13:46
Video: Scientists move burning lava into a pot Scientists at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the University of Iceland are still very much at work at the lava field Holuhraun north of Vatnajökull. They have released a video which shows them transferring burning hot lava into a pot and cooling it with water. 24. september 2014 08:53
The new lava would fill all buildings in Iceland and then some "It's already bigger than the entire Krafla episode,“ says Ármann Höskuldsson, volcanologist at the University of Iceland. 17. september 2014 13:21
Pele´s hair: A fascinating phenomenon created by the volcano It was noticed blowing all around the fissure, but no one could explain or understand why. It looks like tufts of hair and feels like glass wool. 10. september 2014 13:45
Holuhraun eruption about to exceed 1947 eruption The lavaflow from the caldera is equal to the waterflow of the Þjórsá river. 23. september 2014 13:13