South and southwest 8-15 m/s with showers of rain or snow, but fair in the northeast part. Temperatures 0 to 6 C. Turning northerly with snow in the northwest tomorrow afternoon and becoming colder.
Forecast made 11.12.2024 22:06
If the map and the text forecast differs, then the text forecast applies
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Preliminary results
Size | Time | Quality | Location |
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2.8 | 11 Dec 22:10:09 | 90.1 | 25.5 km E of Hveravellir |
2.3 | 10 Dec 18:31:03 | Checked | 2.2 km NNE of Hellisheiðarvirkjun |
2.2 | 10 Dec 13:11:22 | Checked | 3.1 km W of Goðabunga |
The eruption that started on November 20th on the Sundhnúksgígar Crater Row is over, after erupting for 18 days.
Written by a specialist at 10 Dec 06:58 GMT
Earthquake activity throughout the country is described in a weekly summary that is written by a Natural Hazard Specialist. The weekly summary is published on the web every Tuesday. It covers the activity of the previous week in all seismic areas and volcanic systems in the country. If earthquake swarms are ongoing or significant events such as larger earthquakes have occurred during the week, they are specifically discussed. More
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Because of heavy rain and thawing, there is an increased risk of water levels rising in rivers and streams in South Iceland today, Monday, as well as an increased risk of landslides and slush floods.
The small jokulhlaup in Skálm is over.
Due to technical problems we have turned off the service publishing hydrological data on the map. See data here: Real-time monitoring system.
Written by a specialist at 11 Dec 21:11 GMT
The avalanche bulletin is at a regional scale. It does not necessarily represent avalanche danger in urban areas.
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The eruption east of Stóra-Skógfell has ended. This was confirmed today during a drone survey conducted by Civil Protection, which observed no eruptive activity in the area. The last glow in the crater was seen on webcams on the morning of December 8. The eruption began in the evening on November 20 and lasted for 18 days, and out of the seven eruptions that have occurred since December, 2023, it is the second-largest eruption by area.
Read moreUpdated 19. November at 14:45 UTC
Seismic activity in the Sundhnúkar crater row remains relatively low. A few earthquakes have been recorded daily, most of them located between Stóra-Skógfell and Sýlingarfell. On some days in the past week, bad weather has affected the sensitivity of the seismic monitoring system, potentially obstructing the detection of the smallest earthquakes.
Read moreContinued greenhouse gas emissions increase global warming, but could trigger a regional cooling around the North Atlantic. In an open letter released today at the Arctic Circle conference in Reykjavík, Iceland, 44 leading experts on ocean circulation and tipping points from 15 countries appeal to the Nordic Council of Ministers to take this risk seriously, initiate a risk assessment and take steps to minimize this risk as much as possible.
Read moreThe National Meteorological Institutes of Iceland, Denmark, Ireland and the Netherlands have joined forces to respond to climate change with more timely weather forecasting on a new, now operational, common supercomputer. This helps prepare each nation for the impacts of weather patterns, which are expected to become more extreme and more challenging to forecast.
Read moreToday marks one month since the beginning of the eruption that is ongoing at the Sundhnúkur crater row. The eruption, which began on the evening of March 16, is the fourth in a series of eruptions that started when magma began accumulating beneath Svartsengi in late October 2023.
Read moreYesterday (25 March) a seismic swarm occurred in the NW part of the Askja caldera. About 30 earthquakes were detected between 08.00UTC and midday. The largest earthquake detected had a magnitude M3,5 at a depth of about 5 km. Three earthquakes with magnitudes between M2 and M2,5 were also detected, the rest of the activity was characterized by smaller events. Overall, the seismic activity in the Askja has been quite stable between months and unchanged until yesterday. Looking back, we can see that earthquakes with magnitude above M3 were detected in January 2022 and October 2021.
Read moreIce in the ocean around Iceland has mostly arrived from afar.
It comes here from the Denmark strait, which connects the Atlantic Ocean and the Arctic Ocean, between Iceland and Greenland. Sometimes the ice comes directly from north to the northeast corner of Iceland, but all the ice comes from the same source: the East-Greenland current which flows from the Arctic Ocean due south along the east coast of Greenland, passing northwest Iceland.
Read more