Iceland review - 2012, Side 28

Iceland review - 2012, Side 28
26 ICELAND REVIEW the year 1000 AD, it resulted in lava flows from the Brennisteinsfjöll (literally meaning sulfur mountains) volcanic center. One of these eruptions was the famous Christianity lava—so called because it began around the time of the decisive debate over the adoption of Christianity in the Alþing, or Icelandic parliament. The Alþing was held in the lava fields of Þingvellir at that time. A messenger brought news of the new erup- tion to the Alþing just after it had been decided to adopt Christianity in Iceland, and many saw this eruption as a clear sign that the old gods had been angered by the change in religion. It was then that the wise parliamentarian Snorri Goði posed the question: “What angered the gods when the lava flowed that we now stand on?” Members of the Alþing immediately recog- nized his pragmatism and clear logic—that volcanic eruptions are in fact part of a natu- ral process and not tools of the gods. The next event in this episode was an eruption in the Krýsuvík volcanic system in the year 1151, which produced several lava flows. One of these is the Kapelluhraun lava flow, which reached the north coast of the Reykjanes peninsula. Today a major Alcan aluminum smelter plant sits on this young lava flow at the southern edge of the town The Rauðhólar (red hills) are a cluster of pseudocraters, only 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the Reykjavík City Hall.

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