Santa Fe New Mexican

Icelandic volcano erupts, turning sky orange, forcing evacuation­s

Initial assessment­s suggest eruption on island is largest of four recent events in area

- By Annabelle Timsit

A volcano erupted in southweste­rn Iceland for the fourth time in three months — sending destructiv­e lava flowing toward the town of Grindavik and prompting authoritie­s to evacuate the popular Blue Lagoon geothermal spa resort amid emergency warnings.

The eruption between the Hagafell and Stora Skogfell mountains on the Reykjanes Peninsula began Saturday night, according to the Icelandic Meteorolog­ical Office. It quickly formed a 1.8-mile-long fissure in the ground, the office said.

Lava was still flowing early Sunday, and footage of the eruption was being livestream­ed by RUV, Iceland’s national broadcaste­r.

There was no informatio­n immediatel­y available about the scale of damage or possible casualties. The Icelandic Meteorolog­ical Office could not be immediatel­y reached for comment Sunday.

Photos and videos captured the night sky around Mt. Hagafell and Mt. Stora

Skogfell turning molten orange as people watched and emergency services prepared to respond.

Initial assessment­s suggested the eruption was the largest of the four recent ones in the area, since swarms of earthquake­s caused the Svartsengi volcanic system to awaken for the first time in almost 800 years.

Icelandic police declared a local state of emergency, Reuters reported.

Early Sunday, lava was flowing toward the south and southeast at a pace of about 0.62 mph, the Meteorolog­ical Office said. If that pace continues, it said, lava could reach the ocean — which can send steam flying and, in some cases, cause explosions of lava fragments that can be dangerous to anyone nearby.

The plumes of smoke and orange hues could be seen from the Icelandic capital, Reykjavik, according to photos.

Because of the volumes of magma accumulati­ng undergroun­d, there was little warning of Saturday’s eruption before it came, the Meteorolog­ical Office said.

Once an alert was sounded, authoritie­s moved to evacuate people from the area, according to local news outlets, including the Blue Lagoon, one of the country’s most popular tourist attraction­s.

Grindavik, a town of nearly 4,000 people that was evacuated before the volcano’s first eruption in December, was also cleared of any residents who had returned, The Associated Press reported.

Reuters video showed patrons leaving the Blue Lagoon as sirens sounded to warn about the erupting volcano.

Abby Garcia, who was at the Blue Lagoon resort with friends Saturday, told Reuters she mistook the “bright red hue in the sky” for a sunset. Garcia said she and her friends were rushed out of the pool and put on an evacuation bus.

Another witness, Melissa Ezair, told Reuters that the evacuation went smoothly and that she “wasn’t scared.”

“Some people drove cars, then others … took the bus to town. No one seemed out of control or crying or anything. Everybody was steady and … they prepared it very well and took good care of us to be sure we all got out okay,” Ezair said.

Photos from the Icelandic Coast Guard showed the view from a surveillan­ce flight over the new fissure.

The closest airport, Keflavik Internatio­nal, remained open Sunday, and flights were not disrupted. RUV said this eruption was not generating ash — unlike the 2010 eruption of the Eyjafjalla­jokull volcano, which shut down air traffic across Europe.

As The Washington Post reported, that explosive eruption vividly demonstrat­ed what happens when hot lava meets freezing cold water. Known as a phreatomag­matic eruption, the molten rock — magma — made contact with ice and meltwater and flashed to steam. But the volcanic system on the Reykjanes Peninsula is far from the glaciers of Iceland.

 ?? MARCO DI MARCO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Plumes of smoke rise from volcanic activity between Hagafell and Stóri-Skógfell, Iceland, on Saturday. The eruption on the Reykjanes Peninsula began Saturday night, according to the Icelandic Meteorolog­ical Office, and it quickly formed a 1.8-mile-long fissure in the ground, the office said.
MARCO DI MARCO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Plumes of smoke rise from volcanic activity between Hagafell and Stóri-Skógfell, Iceland, on Saturday. The eruption on the Reykjanes Peninsula began Saturday night, according to the Icelandic Meteorolog­ical Office, and it quickly formed a 1.8-mile-long fissure in the ground, the office said.

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