Incredible Footage of the Volcanic Eruption in Iceland

The eruption in Iceland may look beautiful, but what is happening just below the surface is threatening safety and livelihoods on the surface.

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On December 18, a volcano emerged on the Reykjanes peninsula in Iceland, just north of the town of Grindavik, near the world famous Blue Lagoon.

The volcanoes on the Reykjanes peninsula have awakened after eight hundred years.  The tectonic plates of Eurasia and North America are moving apart.

The area, 45 minutes from Reykjavik, had been experiencing earthquakes for the past two months, and Grindavik, a town of almost four thousand people, was evacuated on November 10, when it seemed the volcano might emerge under the town.


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But it didn’t—at least not immediately.  What makes volcanoes so difficult to predict?

TRANSCRIPT

William Moreland: From what we can tell, it seems that volcanic activity on this happens in pulses. So, yeah, 800 years ago there was a series of eruptions that took place all along, readiness at different times, one after the other, with some significant time in between like decades. And so in 2021, we had the first eruption since medieval times. But in fact, in 2020 there was an intrusion detected underneath Serbia.

Moreland: So potentially that was the start of this new episode. Often of our pleasure spark like that. But then we had had this intrusion going on just north of Ethiopia in this area here, and we could see this inflation going on in the GPS. And so this is saying that the ground is moving up with time. And then this dramatic shift is the evening of the 10th of November.

Moreland: And what we can see here is that the ground has dropped by around 40 centimeters. But crucially, the signal of inflation has continued without pause. 

Ármann Höskuldsson: This process is going on for millions of years. One of the largest plate boundary of this type is running along the whole Atlantic on what diverts and plate boundary or dragging the plates away from each other.

Iceland is the only place on earth this plate voluntarily comes out of the sea.

So what we are trying to understand is what lies behind the volcanoes, how the magma comes up the surface and how it spreads from surface. Today, we can only forecast two or three days into the future. The current unrest on return is you can say that there are probably 80% probability that we will have an eruption, but we don't know when it's going to be, and the we cannot nail down where it's going to be.

This action that we are dealing with now will probably be ongoing for the next ten years. We are going to see breaking along the whole peninsula for the next hundred to 300 years.

Micah Garen is an award winning documentary filmmaker who has worked in conflict and post-conflict zones for the past 14 years. Most recently, he has directed five feature length films for Al Jazeera English one of which won a Golden Nymph for Best News Documentary at the Monte Carlo Television Festival in 2014.

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About Marie-Hélène Carleton

Marie-Hélène Carleton is an award-winning documentary filmmaker. Most recently, she has directed five documentaries for Al Jazeera English, one of which won Best News Documentary at the Monte Carlo Festival of Television and Film in 2014.

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Jason Drakeford is a documentary filmmaker, video journalist and educator telling true, impactful stories with motion graphics and cinematic visuals.

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Jeff DelViscio is currently chief multimedia editor/executive producer at Scientific American. He is former director of multimedia at STAT, where he oversaw all visual, audio and interactive journalism. Before that, he spent more than eight years at the New York Times, where he worked on five different desks across the paper. He holds dual master's degrees from Columbia University in journalism and in earth and environmental sciences. He has worked aboard oceanographic research vessels and tracked money and politics in science from Washington, D.C. He was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2018. His work has won numerous awards, including two News and Documentary Emmy Awards.

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