Southerly 10-18 m/s and rain, but mostly dry in the northeast part. Slowly decreasing wind and precipitation today, but still rain in the south. Temperature 2 to 8 deg. C. Rain in many areas by evening.
Northwest and west 8-15 m/s tomorrow, but stronger wind in the far east early on. Intermittent sleet or snow and temperature around or above freezing, but becoming cooler in the afternoon with snowshowers.
Forecast made 26.02.2024 10:56
If the map and the text forecast differs, then the text forecast applies
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Preliminary results
| Size | Time | Quality | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.2 | 25 Feb 07:57:00 | Checked | 4.4 km ESE of Bárðarbunga |
| 2.9 | 25 Feb 11:06:57 | Checked | 6.7 km WSW of Dreki |
| 2.4 | 24 Feb 16:14:13 | Checked | 34.2 km SSW of Eldeyjarboði |
Magma accumulation at Svartsengi continues at a steady rate, similar as before the last three eruptions. If magma accumulation continues at this rate, the magma volume will reach the threshold of estimated volume needed to trigger a dyke propagation and even an eruption next week. Before last eruptions the total volume of magma accumulated at Svartsengi has been between 8 to 13 million m3.
More information can be found herein a regularly updated news article
February 25. at 07:57 a earthquake of M3.2 was measured in Bárðarbunga Volcano.
Written by a specialist at 25 Feb 13:08 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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Due to failure we have turned off the service with the measurement stations. It is possible to use in the mean time.
Written by a specialist at 12 Feb 18:16 GMT
The avalanche bulletin is at a regional scale. It does not necessarily represent avalanche danger in urban areas.
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Updated 23. February at 15:00 UTC
Model calculations indicate that approximately 5 million cubic meters of magma have now accumulated beneath Svartsengi. Considering the precedent set by the previous volcanic eruptions in the Sundhnúkur crater row, the likelihood of an eruption is very high once the volume reaches 8-13 million cubic meters. Based on the results of the model calculations, this could occur early next week if magma accumulation continues at the current rate.
It should be noted that there is a degree of uncertainty in this interpretation, and it cannot be asserted that the behavior will be identical to the last eruption. Additionally, there is a possibility that magma could migrate from Svartsengi to the Sundhnúkur crater row without resulting in a volcanic eruption.
Read more
On 10 November 2023 the town of Grindavík in Iceland was evacuated as massive amounts of magma suddenly flowed into a magma filled crack that propagated underneath the town. Magma was emplaced in a 'vertical sheet' type intrusion in the Earth's crust. An international team of scientists explains the formation of the intrusion, and conditions for ultra-rapid flow into cracks, in a new publication in the prestigious scientific journal Science.
Read more
Updated 23 January at 9:00 UTC
Since the glacial flood reached its peak in the river Gígjukvísl approximately a week ago, the water level has been decreasing and is now comparable to what it was before the flood. The seismic tremor measured on the seismometer at Grímsfjall has also declined, with seismic noise now back to normal levels. Since last week Monday, 21 earthquakes have been recorded in Grímsvötn, including two earthquakes exceeding magnitude two.
Read more
There is evidence of recent changes in the deformation data (cGNSS) around Askja. The deformation rate has decreased since the beginning of August and the signal has flattened at several stations within or around the caldera. At this stage it is uncertain what process is causing this pressure reduction, possibly the source of the inflation has been shut off or it could be related to an outflow of magmatic fluids.
Read more
Updated on 29 August, at 17:00
Hydrological measurements in Skaftá at Sveinstindur show that the increase in discharge has slowed down.The discharge is estimated 620 m3/s at 15:00 compared to 600 m3/s at 9:00 this morning.
Read more
The field trip conducted by a team from IMO last week has been completed succesfully.
Preliminary results indicate no
changes in the gases or waters compared to previous years while
further sample and data analyses are ongoing. Visual inspections
and temperature and pH measurements do not point to
any clear changes in geothermal activity around Askja including
in Víti. The observation on 12 August at the edge of
Bátnshraun which was reported as a possible steam plume is now recognized
as dust caused by a minor rock fall on a steep slope of the
caldera wall.
Through links in this article, climatological information is available, i.e. monthly- and annual values of various weather components in Iceland since 1961. Averages provided are either monthly or annual averages. Temperature is given in degrees celsius, air pressure in hPa, humidity in percentages, precipitation in millimeters and windspeed in m/s.
Read more