East Bay Times

Volcano’s eruption creates ‘perfect’ tourist attraction

- By Nikolaj Skydsgaard

A volcano in Iceland spewing lava into the sky since it erupted last Friday could continue its spectacula­r display for years, potentiall­y becoming a new tourist attraction on the island known for its natural wonders.

Thousands of Icelanders have flocked to the site of the eruption on the Reykjanes Peninsula, some 18.6 miles southwest of the capital, hoping to be awed by the rare lava fountains and even to cook a meal on the scorching crust of magma.

Drone footage filmed over the crater shows the molten lava bubbling and spurting, and gushing down the sides of the volcano.

“It’s a perfect tourist eruption,” said Thorvaldur

Thordarson, a volcanolog­y professor at the University of Iceland.

“With the caveat though, don’t go too close.”

To cope with the hoard of visitors, authoritie­s in Iceland set up a 2.2-mile hiking trail to the eruption site and are patrolling the area to prevent onlookers from venturing into hazardous areas polluted by volcanic gasses.

“People were hiking from many different directions into the area,” Agust Gunnar Gylfason, project manager at the Department of Civil Protection and Emergency Management, told Reuters.

Gylfason estimated more than 10,000 people had ventured to the site since Friday evening, some of whom had needed rescuing due to the harsh weather and traveling without enough food or proper clothing.

Since the initial eruption, lava has steadily seeped out of the volcano at a rate of between 5 to 10 cubic meters per second, Thordarson said, a flow strong enough to ensure the lava does not solidify and close the fissure. For now.

“If it drops below three cubic meters, it’s very likely

that the eruption will stop,” Thordarson said.

He compared the lava flux to that of the Pu’u ‘O’o eruption in Hawaii, which began in 1983 and continued to erupt for 35 years.

“It could end tomorrow or it could still be going in a few decades.”

 ?? MARCO DI MARCO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman takes a photo as lava flows from an eruption of a volcano on the Reykjanes Peninsula in southweste­rn Iceland on Tuesday. Iceland’s latest volcano eruption is quickly attracting crowds of people to the lava flows.
MARCO DI MARCO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman takes a photo as lava flows from an eruption of a volcano on the Reykjanes Peninsula in southweste­rn Iceland on Tuesday. Iceland’s latest volcano eruption is quickly attracting crowds of people to the lava flows.

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