The Jerusalem Post

Iceland lava flows slow after fourth recent eruption

- • Reuters

Lava flows from a volcano in southweste­rn Iceland that had lit up the night sky on Saturday slowed on Sunday while barriers appeared to be successful in steering the lava away from infrastruc­ture including a nearby fishing town.

The eruption – the fourth since December – began on Saturday evening, sending fountains of molten rock soaring from a roughly 3 km-long fissure, roughly the same size and at the same place as the last eruption in February.

“The eruption was quite energetic, and there was a lot of material coming out, more than in the previous eruption. So lava was flowing quite fast,” Halldor Geirsson, associate professor at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the University of Iceland, told Reuters.

Authoritie­s had warned for weeks that an eruption was imminent on the Reykjanes peninsula just south of Iceland’s capital Reykjavik, as magma had been accumulati­ng undergroun­d.

Livestream video early on Sunday showed lava flowing just a few hundred meters from Grindavik, a fishing town of some 4,000 residents that was evacuated during an eruption in November and again for the last eruption in February. A few residents who had since returned home were evacuated on Saturday, public broadcaste­r RUV reported.

“The rate of the lava flow is getting lower and lower,” said Geirsson. “Most of the flow is going east of the town towards the sea, so it looks like the barriers are doing the job they were designed for.”

Authoritie­s were also monitoring lava flowing towards the peninsula’s Svartsengi geothermal power plant, The Icelandic Meteorolog­ical Office said.

Volcanic outbreaks in the Reykjanes peninsula are so-called fissure eruptions, which do not usually cause large explosions or significan­t dispersal of ash into the stratosphe­re.

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