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  • 21. Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-04-26_IES_IMO

    (~16,000 ft) between 12:00 and 14:00 GMT; elevation of 3.9 km recorded at 17:40 GMT [From aerial observations and radar measurements] Heading: Eastwards at elevations above ~4 km (~13–14,000 ft) Colour: Mostly white (steam) to the east of the crater, but grey tephra pulses above the crater Tephra fallout: No ash-fall reported, although light ash-fall possible over Mýrdalsjökull Lightening /media/jar/Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-04-26_IES_IMO.pdf
  • 22. Sea ice in July 2007

    in the month. One dispatch was received, regarding ice scattering and iceberg quite off shore, or 67°05N and 30°18W and south to 66°33N and 30°09W. Slow northeasterly or variable winds were predominant in the Greenland strait in the month and the ice appeared, according to satellite information, to reduce as the month progressed /sea-ice/monthly/2007/nr/2304
  • 23. Sea ice in November 2010

    Search Search string Contact IMO © Veðurstofa Íslands | Bústaðavegi 7- 9 | 105 Reykjavík | Phone 522 6000 | Fax: 522 6001 Recording 902 0600 | SSN 630908-0350 Contact us | Employees /sea-ice/monthly/2010/nr/2346
  • 24. Sea ice in January 2010

    moved towards the Westfjords in the first week and the 7th IMO issued a warning as the ship passage between Barði and Straumnes could close the following days. However, that did not happen, most likely as the ice melted as it came closer ashore. The 16th the ice-edge was 17,5 nm E of Horn, 12,5 nm N of Drangasker and 16 nm NNE of Þaralátursnes. The 17th two ice bands reach land north /sea-ice/monthly/2010/nr/2336
  • 25. Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-04-29_IES_IMO

    from the local police; and aerial observations from a scientific flight with the Icelandic Coastguard (observation plane TF-SIF). Eruption plume: Height (a.s.l.): Not visible above clouds at 3.6–5.1 km (12–17,000 ft), but most likely below 3.6 km (12,000 ft). Before the overflight this morning, the eruption plume was not seen on radar images from Keflavík, nor on satellite /media/jar/Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-04-29_IES_IMO.pdf
  • 26. Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-05-01_IES_IMO

    detections from the weather radar at Keflavík Airport. Heading: South-east from the eruption site. Plume track detected up to 400 km from the eruption site on AHRR and MODIS satellite imagery (12:11 GMT and 13:30 GMT). Colour: Dark grey (ash) clouds observed up to 4 km a..s.l. (~13,000 ft). White (steam) plumes rising from Gígjökull, north of the eruption site. Tephra fallout: Dark, coarser-grained /media/jar/Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-05-01_IES_IMO.pdf
  • 27. Eyjafj_status_2010-04-27

    the air at 12:00 GMT at an elevation of 3–3.6 km (10–12,000 ft). Heading: West–northwest from the eruption site. Colour: Light, low-lying clouds of steam observed over the eruption site, together with occasional bursts of grey to black-coloured cloud, which rose to up to half of the total height of the eruption plume. Above this level, the plume was lighter in colour with a capping of white cloud /media/jar/myndsafn/Eyjafj_status_2010-04-27.pdf
  • 28. Sea ice in June 2009

    that sparse ice was to be found within the ice-edge. The information also indicated that the ice-edge came closest to shore about 55-75 nm westnorthwest of the Westfjords. A dispatch regarding icebergs was received by the end of the month, but they were at 66°40N and 25°30W. Information regarding the ice-edge was issued four times by the Met office and the Office also received a photograph, taken from /sea-ice/monthly/2009/nr/2328
  • 29. 2010_005_

    Century control runs, as well as 21st Century forecast runs, submitted by various institutions to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) for their Forth 11 Table 1. General circulation and regional climate models that were considered in this study. Model Version Model Name, Institute BCCR BCM 2.0 Bergen Climate Model, Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Bergen, Norway CCCMA CGCM 3.1 /media/ces/2010_005_.pdf
  • 30. 2010-05-02_En-IES_IMO

    of ash between 3–3.3 km a.s.l. (10,000–11,000 ft) at 60° N, 16° W (~470 km south-east of Iceland). London VAAC have been informed about this siting. Meltwater: Before 16:00 GMT, discharge levels at the old Markarfljóts bridge, ~18 km downstream from Gígjökull, were noticeably lower than yesterday's levels. Between 16:00–17:00 GMT, a meltwater pulse was detected at the bridge /media/jar/2010-05-02_En-IES_IMO.pdf

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