Iceland review - 2012, Page 30

Iceland review - 2012, Page 30
28 ICELAND REVIEW Hotel Rangá is the only four star luxury resort in South Iceland and the perfect base to explore the area’s many attractions and natural wonders all year round Aurora Adventure Events Gourmet Luxury Romance Hotel Rangá 851 Hella Tel. +354 487 5700 Fax +354 487 5701 hotelranga@hotelranga.is www.hotelranga.is Hotel Rangá offers 51 luxurious and cozy rooms, including the seven uniquely designed and decorated World Pavillion suites. Renowned gourmet restaurant on site. Only 96km from the Reykjavik capital area. of Hafnarfjörður, and an entire industrial zone has been developed here on top of the lava. You will drive past this aluminum plant on your way to Reykjavík. One won- ders about the planning, or perhaps lack of planning that has resulted in developing industry and housing so extensively on the surface of this lava flow, as the probability of more lava flowing over it in the future is quite significant. The third event in this vol- canic episode on the Reykjanes peninsula occurred in the year 1226, and it produced lava flows quite close to the Keflavík airport and near the Blue Lagoon thermal springs, now a popular tourist site. Fortunately, the volcanism on the Reykjanes peninsula in this episode of the Middle Ages had very little impact on the Icelanders at the time. The Reykjanes peninsula was very thinly populated until the late nineteenth century, because it is a largely barren lava plain and farming is dif- ficult here. It was only in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century that villages developed there because of aggressive fish- ing in the excellent fishing grounds nearby. Now the region of the lava flows is one of the most developed areas of Iceland, within a region of considerable volcanic risk. Some seven hundred years have passed since the end of the last volcanic episode in this part of Iceland. It is quite wrong to assume that this long quiet period is an indication that activity in the Reykjanes peninsula has ceased. Quite the contrary. Because we have passed through such a long quiet period, we are probably getting close to the initiation of the next episode. GEOLOGY Straumsvík bay. A big aluminum smelter stands on relatively young lava at the outskirts of Hafnarfjörður. This is why there is some concern about the current unrest of the Krýsuvík volca- nic center, south of Reykjavík, where the ground is alternately swelling and subsiding at an alarming rate. The fissures from this center pass close to the outer suburbs east of Reykjavík, and lava flows from this source could have a huge impact on the greater Reykjavík region in the future. By the time you leave Iceland, you will probably be able to pick out the young lava flows from the road. They are almost bar- ren of all vegetation, compared to the old lava flows, which are now covered by grass and shrubs. This is just one of the clues you can use in order to learn how to “read” the history of the ground you travel over as you visit Iceland. It is truly a geologist’s paradise. 

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Iceland review

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