This information is going to get outdated quickly.
Current status on Báðarbunga volcano eruption
- Eruption continues in Holuhraun. Most of the craters have stopped erupting for now. The main craters continue to erupt.
- It is my view that eruption under the glacier is imminent. That eruption would take place close to the location of today magnitude 4,5 and 3,0 took place today. When it might start is impossible to know.
- Earthquake activity continues in Bárðarbunga volcano. With largest earthquakes today having magnitude 5,0. Most of the earthquake take place on the caldera rim, since the caldera is sinking into the crust. More on this below [1].
- The lava field is now going into Jökulsá á Fjöllum. It is currently crossing the glacier river and creating a dam in the process. Only steam has been seen in this process.
- Risk of eruption in Bárðarbunga volcano slopes is extremely high. There has not been any eruption in Báðarbunga volcano slopes since 23-August-2014.
- GPS instruments have now be installed on top of Bárðarbunga volcano today. This is to measure exactly what is going on inside the volcano.
- There is less blue haze today. There is concern that it is going to have effect on people, animals and plants if the blue haze stays for long time in any given area. Acid rain is a big concern at the moment. The SO2 levels in eastern Iceland have been the highest since measurements started in Iceland back in 1970.
- There is high concentration of gas in the lava around the eruption site. It is in fact so high that it has put the geologist that are working there at great risk. Due the local weather the lava field is creating [2].
The caldera issue in Bárðarbunga volcano [1]
The caldera in Bárðarbunga volcano is dropping and it is dropping fast. According to latest news from Rúv (see link below) the caldera is dropping up to 90 cm/day. That is a huge drop for a mountain. There is also clue that central part of the caldera floor is now so soft that it no longer breaks and creates earthquakes, it is just buckling under the strain. This increases the risk of eruption in the central caldera up to almost certainty levels (for me that is 96+% chance of happening). The latest news from Rúv tell that the thickness of the glacier in the central part of the glacier is up to 850 meters thick. Since last Saturday the caldera has dropped 2 – 3 meters, meaning that current drop is now around 18,5 meters.
There is also high risk of eruptions in the slopes of Bárðarbunga volcano. None have taken place since 23-August-2014. It is not clear why that is. Some ideas say that it might be due to pressure release of the dyke eruption that is now taking place. I am now not personally convinced that is the case. The reason for lack of eruption must be some other. I don’t know what that reason is yet and I don’t think anyone knows at current time.
Local weather around the lava field [2]
The lava field has been creating a lot of it’s own weather. So much that is creating hazardous working environment for the geologist working close the lava field and the eruption site.
The local weather has also created small localized tornadoes. I spotted this one earlier today.
It is difficult to see the tornado on this picture. But it is the white line across the image. Image taken at 15:27 UTC on 8-September-2014. Screen-shot of Míla web-camera.
This local weather is not going anywhere while the heat is at the levels as it is now. It might even last for months after this eruption finishes.
News bits in Icelandic and English
Continuing subsidence in Bardarbunga (Rúv.is)
Askjan í Bárðarbungu sigið um 2,5 til 3 m (Rúv.is, Icelandic)
Eitt stærsta hraungosið frá því á 19. öld (Rúv.is, Icelandic)
Updates 08-September-2014
- According to latests news on Rúv this is now the largest lava eruption since 19th century in Iceland. The eruption in Holuhraun is now many times larger than largest eruption in Krafla volcano during its 10 year eruption period.
Note on comments
In order to keep things running smooth on this website. Please just post links to images. Along with some text about what they are. That also prevents the ant-spam system false flag it and me from regarding links as spam. I also have to ask people how copy data from Icelandic Met Office and University of Iceland to provide a link to the source. This is disclaimer that they added in recent weeks. I want to be on the right side of this government organizations. I also want to prevent that I have to remove comments due there demands.
Article updated on 08-September-2014 at 18:50 UTC.
Starting to look like a caldera eruption is on its way.Brace yourself!
… What’s happening just to the north of askja? That’s a pretty decent swarm kicking off, and some of those quakes are pretty deep.
Just normal tectonic activity. It might be responding to the stress changes in the crust from the dyke south of Askja volcano.
Does seem to have been a lot of activity in this region over the past couple of weeks, I’m also noticing that the swarms in that region are very slowly moving northwards.
Could the cause of the barda dyke also of alowed for a small less potent dyke to form to the north?
Anything at this location might be connected to Askja volcano activity. But so far this looks just like normal tectonic activity.
Interesting dark cloud our smoke in the front right foreground of Mila 1
Another 4.3 in the caldera.
So if the caldera blows its top, which camera has the best view?
I think the Mila 1. But they can change the direction. They did it at the start of the fissure. And perhaps other webcam at the Mila site from a distance…?
Things seem to be gathering pace at Bardar, the clouds above the eruption site look alive!
Thank you for your ongoing updates, Jon. Always concise, balanced and informative.
Just a quick note: in the final bullet point under ‘Current Status’, I think you meant to write ‘concentration’ rather than ‘consternation’?
Best wishes, as always.
Thanks for the notice. This is a spelling check failure of sorts.
Edit: Fixed spelling error.
‘Shorts’ are better than ‘sorts’ lol
Jon, if I understand you right, there could be an eruption under the glacier near Dyjujökull (where the 4.5 and 3. occur) and also at Bardabunga?
Yes. There can be eruption anywhere along the dyke area. There have already been minor eruptions under the glacier. They where just so small that they didn’t create any glacier flood, but they created some minor cauldron in the glacier.
There can also be eruption in Bárðarbunga volcano at the same time if there is enough magma to go around and that seems to be the case. Even if only one eruption has happened in Bárðarbunga volcano so far (it is not erupting now).
Thanks, it’s a little scary. I hope the best for all residents…
Looks very dark on the web cams.
Time will tell what is going to happen, don’t think anyone is sure.
Great job John keep up the good work
Jon
Have you seen anything interesting that you would share with us in the waveforms of some of the earthquakes that have been happening.
Better late than never…
http://en.vedur.is/earthquakes-and-volcanism/earthquakes/vatnajokull/#view=table
Monday
08.09.2014 06:15:41 64.671 -17.470 6.5 km 4.8 99.0 4.3 km NE of Bárðarbunga
Ah, that’s the one that’s been missing all day! Saw it happen, then it never appeared on the maps.
Interesting to see the 3 and 4.5 under Dyjujökull. Not been many +3 eartquakes there lately.
Another dike forming?
Fissure! Not dike!
The suspense continues. As much as I’d like to see nature roar into action, I’m not sure if it’s a good idea to want it too. It could become very bad for many people in many ways.
Hi Jon, in your expert opinion, if there is to be an eruption in the bardasrbunga caldera, would it be sooner rather than later?
Update on Vedur site:
http://en.vedur.is/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/2947
8th September 2014 19:20 – from geoscientist on duty
The earthquake activity today continues at the northern part of the dyke intrusion. The largest earthquake since the end of August in the dyke occurred at 16:27 today with magnitude 4.5. The largest earthquakes located today at the rim:
kl. 06:15, M 4,8
kl. 07:20 M 4, 6
kl. 14:48, M 5,0
kl. 17:53, M 4,3
An earthquake swarm is being seen north of Herðubreið. About 80 earthquakes have been recorded today, all below magnitude 2. Swarms in this area are not uncommon. Due to high concentration of SO2, scientists are leaving the area.
Is that steam rising on Mila 1? It’s difficult to see with the rain drops! I only ask because its the first time I’ve seen it so clearly.
Serious looking grey/white smoke rising from centre of the caldera at Bardarbunga.
Can be seen on Mila Barbarbunga Webcam 1.
What do you think?
Keep up the great work Jon.
Behind the hill the lavaflow meets the river. It’s steam from the water.
“this is now the largest lava eruption since 19th century in Iceland”. I hope we understand this even though many waits for somthing bigger. In a way its already here. Thanks for your work Jon.
Hi Jon,
Thanks for all your hard work, I am in Norfolk (uk), been looking daily. Mother Nature is amazing!
I am a little worried about the Icelandic people, if B goes off, will everyone be safe?
The lava fountains is very high now, anyone seen higher in this eruption?
They’re pretty impressive. I haven’t seen higher.
Ha ha any one seen the car M1, i hope its official, if not they are really stupid.
Great update Jon much appreciate xx
R2D2 has a companion on cam 1
Must get lonely up there 🙂
Another sensor next to R2 i guess.
Large seismic spikes a sinking caldera toxic gases, me thinks it’s time to run. Things look like it going to go out with a bang. It’s all looking a bit unstable now. Lets hope all the volcanologists stay safe, don’t forget it they who put there lives on the line to make sure people understand and keep them safe.
And here I thought R2D2 was a lot smaller than that.
New magnitude 4,5 to 5,3 earthquake coming in on my geophones when I write this.
What is that very dark smoke centre cam 1?
I thought R2D2 is burning 😉
No, it’s still the steam from Lava/river-meeting. It only looks dark because of the light…but ist is getting more…so more lava in the river
Like in this picture:
http://t.co/EhMY8kejpe
Some guy is a bright green shirt maintaining the radar (or whatever) on Cam1 – shows just how big that is.
It’s all happening to fast, Big B surely can’t take much more.
The earthquake that I did see on my geophones was on the Reykjanes peninsula, not Bárðarbunga volcano.
Aha. Thanks, Jon.
4.5-5.3 mag on Reykjanes peninsula?
More like 3,0 or close to it.
What is that smoke rising right in front of where the radar truck is?
Looks like the wind has pushed the cloud towards R2D2
Eddy i’m wondering if whoever put the sensors thinks the same!
This ia a really good mobile app for monitoring larger Earthquakes.
I will ask them if they could add a feed from Iceland network
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=de.gempa.android.eqinfo
Could that be a new fissure opening up on B1 ? BTW Jon I have made some purchases via your Amazon link – hope you get the commission OK.
Look here:
http://icelandgeology.net/?p=4935&cpage=1#comment-57646
Thx.
I should. Thanks for the support. 🙂
The Truck on Cam1, one called R2D2(cute name), with its companion vechile has what looks like a small plume of dark material/smoke going up. Faintly I see more of the plume material, cloud in a line towards the fissure eruptions. They are very bright, Gates of Hell as it was called by my norwegian grandfather.
No such thing as mantle plumes, it is sinking crust causing rising blobs that drive volcanics
http://m.phys.org/news/2014-09-textbook-theory-volcanoes-wrong.html
“Textbook theory behind volcanoes may be wrong”
I think it’s in discussion?
Got a copy of the article from PNAS Early Edition … thanks!
Hi Mike,
could you please pass me the reference?
Thanks in advance.
Eva 🙂
Just put up on VC also
Crust has to be under tension for a plume to break thru
http://www.astrobio.net/topic/solar-system/earth/geology/mantle-plumes-crack-continents/
This is still pretty relevant to the Colorado plateau also.
They think it is a non-punch thru bleb that is peeling off the bottom layers of crust, allowing a rebound type uplift.
That is interesting. I hope they can support it with data, as I think they are already doing. I am sure more research is going to provide more details.
Stunning view on Cam1, really bright.
Jon, many thanks again for the continued coverage of this event. Just out of interest is there any way you could please give us a sense of size of the Dike. I get that it is a lateral “offshoot” from the main magma chamber of a volcano and in this case the pressure of the new magma coming into it was causing the ground in the area to lift and separate as evidenced on the GPS sites last week. Are we looking at “pipeline” of magma many kilometers in diameter or just hundreds of meters? Or is my sense of what it is way off the mark?
Any help you could offer would be appreciated.
The dyke is around 40 km long and has depth up to 10 km according to latest measurement that did see.
Many thanks, Jon.
I hope R2 & it’s new friend don’t get ‘ideas’ during the night, the ‘romantic’ setting, looking out over the view could get the better of them!
If there’s little R2’s in the next few days we ‘know’ what they’ve been up to! 😉
Blueberry Hill springs to mind 🙂
Heh heh.
Oh, yes very romantic:
http://abload.de/img/14-09-08-014-bardafjprm.jpg
Is that a new fissure opened below the hill.
Lava is in the river to such a degree now, that it might be starting to dam it up a little bit. Constant steaming, and maybe some small steam explosions, should be a regular feature now.
As I take my last look at Cam 1 for today
Fire fire burning bright. Lets hope all the scientist stay safe, as they risk there lives to bring us this amazing sight and keep us safe….I bid goodnight
The eruption appears to be getting bigger ?
I was thinking the same, but it’s difficult to gauge its size with all the reflection from the smoke plume. It’s certainly huge!
ice melting can behave funny …. (in Netherlands in winter the IJsselmeer freezes sometimes, when temp goes up the ice starts to break in clumps and forms meters high ‘mountains’ agains the dikes around the lake). If an ice mass of ca. 800 m thick starts to crack and move it can form impressive cracks i presume. I was at the site in Netherlands and shot this picture: http://media-cache-ec0.pinimg.com/originals/a6/3e/9d/a63e9d961dac18fa4f78a7b13d44181a.jpg If you are close by you really hear the ice work and see it move quite violently sometimes.
The ‘other site’ seems to be more interested in raising money and “discussions behind closed doors” about events-which I find quite insulting! Thanks for the honesty of the discussion Jon! Seems to be a MUCH more open and honest discussion at this site! Thanks
I agree – not learning much in t’other place at the mo
There is a vehicle and two people by the volcano in webcam 1
Thank you very much for all the info!
As scientist, and as ICeland and volcano-aholic I really appreciate it.
I would really love to have the chance in the future to take part in a similar research.
And of course, to come back to Iceland.
Good night.
Eva
Thanks. I do ask for donations when I remember to do so. But I am so busy watching for volcano activity that I always forget. I am just a hobbyist in this field, but I have read a lot of science papers on this subject and I am always trying to upgrade my knowledge.
What on earth are they doing there ?
I thought the scientist’s had left ?
They are preparing for an ash eruption is my guess. At least they got the hardware for it installed. Then they leave the area.
Slightly off topic, the other side of the world, here is a video of the recent volcanic eruption at Rabaul Volcano, Papua New Guinea. It’s in the tropics, no glacier to melt but there is an impressive sonic boom.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KuOp5nbXe_4
Someone asked in the previous thread if I live in Iceland or am just visiting. The latter. What a time to be here.
Brave guys ! Absolute respect from me !