Iceland review - 2012, Side 27

Iceland review - 2012, Side 27
ICELAND REVIEW 25 Relatively new lava, and a popular playground in the new residential area Ásvellir in the town of Hafnarfjörður. plate to the east, which are separating at a rate of about 2 cm per year. The Reykjanes peninsula is therefore a very young geologic feature, and it is still growing and active. But the activity is episodic and not continuous. Long periods of quiet, lasting several hun- dred years, are followed by bursts of activity, with several eruptions occurring in rapid succession. About one thousand years ago, around the year 1000 AD, an episode of volcanic activity began on the Reykjanes peninsula, which lasted with some breaks for about 350 years. The map shows the dis- tribution of the lava flows from this episode and later lava flows from other eruptions in historic time. We know that another earlier episode took place about two thou- sand years ago. How soon will we have to face a new episode? It is not a question of if, but rather when it will start that worries geologists who have studied the volcanic history here, including the region around the metropolis of Reykjavík. When the last episode began, around Kleifarvatn

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Iceland review

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