[EN PHOTOS] The new eruption in Iceland attracts the curious

Onlookers flocked Thursday to the site of a new eruption in a volcanic fissure located in an uninhabited valley about forty kilometers from Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland.

• Read also: [IMAGES] Eruption in a volcanic fissure near Reykjavik, Iceland

The eruption, which began on Wednesday, is located nearly a kilometer from the Mount Fagradalsfjall volcano in southwest Iceland, which had been erupting for six months last year.


[EN PHOTOS]  The new eruption in Iceland attracts the curious

The eruption site, in a hard-to-reach area that requires a 90-minute walk, has already attracted more than 1,830 visitors on the first day the fissure appeared, according to Icelandic authorities.


[EN PHOTOS]  The new eruption in Iceland attracts the curious

And curious people were walking towards the site early Thursday morning.

The authorities had called on Wednesday the population not to go to the site before a risk assessment is carried out. But on Thursday, civil protection said only young children should stay out of the area of ​​the eruption.

The gases emanating from volcanic eruptions, especially sulfur dioxide, can be dangerous or even fatal.

Last year, the site of the eruption, easily accessible on foot, had attracted more than 435,000 tourists.


[EN PHOTOS]  The new eruption in Iceland attracts the curious

The Meteorological Institute of Iceland estimated the length of the fissure at 360 meters on Thursday, with lava jets reaching around 10 to 15 meters.

The flow of lava in the early hours of the eruption was estimated at 32 cubic meters per second, according to measurements made Wednesday by scientists from the Institute of Earth Sciences, three and a half hours after the start of the eruption. eruption.


[EN PHOTOS]  The new eruption in Iceland attracts the curious

This is about four or five times more than at the start of the 2021 eruption.

“The current eruption is therefore much more powerful,” the Institute said on Facebook.

According to the Institute of Earth Sciences, lava from the new eruption covered an area of ​​about 74,000 square meters.

Iceland has 32 volcanic systems currently considered active, the most in Europe.


[EN PHOTOS]  The new eruption in Iceland attracts the curious

The country, which experiences an eruption every five years on average, straddles the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, a fissure separating the Eurasian and North American tectonic plate.

The movement of these plates is partly responsible for the country’s intense seismic activity


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