September 2012 as white dots, 20-21 October as red dots and 22-23 October as green dots (only M>2). The M5.6 event is marked as a black star. The blue circle shows the area of the cluster that was detected in the morning of 22 October. Tectonic faults are shown as black lines.
News
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in a gully below a shelf in the middle of the mountainside at approximately 340 m a.s.l. It flowed down the gully and onto a road above a recently constructed catching dam which is a short distance above the uppermost houses in the village. The avalanche hit the dam along a more than 50 m distance and left rocks and branches that it picked up on its way on the damside. It was approximately 2 m short
/about-imo/news/nr/3041
to 1.3 cm over one year. In the spring of 2018, a new fracture running down the western slope of Svínafellsheiði was discovered. Recent analysis of remote sensing data shows that the area between the fractures and the glacier margin has moved at a rate of 2 to 4 cm per year in the period from late August 2016 to late August 2017. The area in motion is about 0.5–1 km2 in size. A rough estimate
/about-imo/news/fractures-in-svinafellsheidi-and-a-potential-rockslide-on-svinafellsjokull