The lowest layers had a cloud ceiling of 2000 feet, the second layer between 6000-9000 and a third layer at flight level around 19000 feet. The clouds slowly dissipated to the south.
The flight was directed to the northeast from Reykjavik airport, north towards Hofsjokull and Askja. A large circle was then flown around the Bárðarbunga caldera and Holuhraun. In the later part of the flight the area
/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/3011
Over the western part of Iceland the cloud cover was broken and layered. The lowest layers
had a cloud ceiling of 2000 feet, the second layer between 6000-9000 and a third layer at
flight level around 19000 feet. The clouds slowly dissipated to the south.
The flight was directed to the northeast from Reykjavik airport, north towards Hofsjokull and
Askja. A large circle was then flown around
/media/jar/Bardarbunga-2014_October-events.pdf
The lowest layers had a cloud ceiling of 2000 feet, the second layer between 6000-9000 and a third layer at flight level around 19000 feet. The clouds slowly dissipated to the south.
The flight was directed to the northeast from Reykjavik airport, north towards Hofsjokull and Askja. A large circle was then flown around the Bárðarbunga caldera and Holuhraun. In the later part of the flight the area
/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/3011/
m
J
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/media/ces/2010_017.pdf
The hydrological simulations were performed with the Wa-
tershed Simulation and Forecasting System (WSFS) developed
and operated in the Finnish Environment Institute (Vehviläinen
et al., 2005). The WSFS is used in Finland for operational hydrolog-
ical forecasting and flood warnings (www.environment.fi/water-
forecast/), regulation planning and research purposes
(Vehviläinen and Huttunen, 1997
/media/ces/Journal_of_Hydrology_Veijalainen_etal.pdf
Percolating water from the melt-
ing snow may have increased the rate of movement. Seismic data
indicate that a sudden movement occurred around 40 minutes be-
fore the slide, but at 23:24 the failure point was reached and the
rockslide was released.
? Width of fracture line: 800 m
? Vertical drop: 350 m
? Run-out length beyond the lake shore: ~1000 m
? Volume: ~30–50 million m³
? Estimated
/media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2015/IMO_AnnualReport2014.pdf
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/media/loftslag/Hare-2011-ParticipatoryModelling.pdf
for the three
days considered here, are listed in Table 1. Changes in orbital parameters are mainly significant
between the last and the previous two cases, with a drop in noontime solar intensity, defined as
the sine of the sun altitude angle, by 14–17%. This difference needs to be taken into account
when comparing shortwave radiation fluxes between the different cases.
The diurnal cycles of net
/media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2015/VI_2015_006.pdf