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Coordinates: 64°25′12″N 17°19′48″W / 64.42000°N 17.33000°W / 64.42000; -17.33000
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{{Short description|Volcano in Iceland}}
{{Infobox mountain
{{Infobox mountain
|name = Grímsvötn
|name = Grímsvötn
|photo = Iceland_Grimsvoetn_1972-B.jpg
|photo = Iceland_Grimsvoetn_1972-B.jpg
|photo_caption = Grímsvötn and the Vatnajökull glacier, Iceland, July 1972
|photo_caption = Grímsvötn and the [[Vatnajökull]] glacier, Iceland, July 1972
|elevation_m = 1725
|elevation_m = 1725
|elevation_ref = <ref name=gvp>{{cite gvp|1=1703-01=|2=Grímsvötn|accessdate=2006-08-15}}</ref>
|elevation_ref = <ref name=gvp>{{cite gvp|vn=373010|name=Grímsvötn|access-date=27 April 2024}}</ref>
|prominence_m =
|prominence_m =
|prominence_ref=
|prominence_ref=
|listing = [[List of volcanoes in Iceland]]
|listing = [[List of volcanoes in Iceland]]
|location = [[Austur-Skaftafellssýsla]] / [[Vestur-Skaftafellssýsla]], {{ISL}}
|location = [[Austur-Skaftafellssýsla]] / [[Vestur-Skaftafellssýsla]], Iceland
|map = Iceland | region =
|map = Iceland |relief=1
|range_coordinates =
|map_caption =
|map_caption =
|map_size = 200
|map_size =
|label_position = right
|label_position = right
|coordinates = {{coord|64|25|12|N|17|19|48|W|type:mountain_region:IS_scale:100000|format=dms|display=inline,title}}
|lat_d = 64 | lat_m = 25 | lat_s = 12 | lat_NS = N
|type = [[Caldera|Volcanic caldera]]
|long_d= 17 | long_m= 19 | long_s= 48 | long_EW= W
|age =
|type = [[Caldera|volcanic caldera]]
|last_eruption = May 2011
|age =
|map_image ={{maplink|frame=yes|frame-align=center|frame-width=260|frame-height=340|frame-long=-17.3|frame-lat=64.2|zoom=7|raw=[{{Wikipedia:Map data/Grímsvötn}},{{Wikipedia:Map data/Askja}},{{Wikipedia:Map data/Öræfi volcanic belt}},{{Wikipedia:Map data/Hofsjökull}},{{Wikipedia:Map data/Katla}},{{Wikipedia:Map data/Snæfellsnes volcanic belt}},{{Wikipedia:Map data/Hengill}}]
|last_eruption = 22 May 2011
|text=Geological features near the Grímsvötn central volcano and its fissure swarm (red outlines). The fissure swarm's recent surface lava flows are shaded violet (darker if more recent, vents violet outline). {{Wikipedia:Map data/Askja/key}}
}}
}}
}}
The '''Grímsvötn''' sub-glacial lakes ({{IPA-is|'kriːmsvœʰtn̥}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.youtube.com/comment?lc=gvgitQuH96JPi8McKoZ6pi5DdNlb2zn-sCWvu4A56NA|title=How to pronounce /grímsvötn/|publisher=youtube.com|accessdate=2011-05-23}}</ref>; ''vötn'' = "waters", singular: {{lang|is|''vatn''}}) and the volcano of the same name are in South-East [[Iceland]]. They are in the [[highlands of Iceland]] at the northwestern side of the [[Vatnajökull]] ice-cap. The lakes are at {{coord|64|25|N|17|20|W|}}, at an elevation of {{convert|1725|m|ft|abbr=on}}. Beneath the lakes is the [[magma chamber]] of the Grímsvötn volcano.
'''Grímsvötn''' ({{IPA|is|ˈkrimsˌvœhtn̥|audio=Grímsvötn pronunciation.ogg}};<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.youtube.com/comment?lc=gvgitQuH96JPi8McKoZ6pi5DdNlb2zn-sCWvu4A56NA |title=How to pronounce /grímsvötn/ |publisher=youtube.com |access-date=23 May 2011}}</ref> ''vötn'' = "waters", singular: {{lang|is|vatn}}) is an [[active volcano]] with a (partially subglacial) fissure system located in [[Vatnajökull National Park]], [[Iceland]]. The [[central volcano]] is completely subglacial and located under the northwestern side of the [[Vatnajökull]] ice cap. The subglacial [[caldera]] is at {{coord|64|25|N|17|20|W|}}, at an elevation of {{convert|1725|m|ft|abbr=on}}. Beneath the caldera is the [[magma chamber]] of the Grímsvötn volcano.


Grímsvötn is a basaltic volcano which has the highest eruption frequency of all the volcanoes in Iceland and has a southwest-northeast-trending fissure system. The massive climate-impacting [[Laki]] fissure eruption of 1783-1784 was a part of the same fissure system. Grímsvötn was erupting at the same time as Laki during 1783, but continued to erupt until 1785. Because most of the volcano lies underneath Vatnajökull, most of its eruptions have been [[Subglacial eruption|subglacial]] and the interaction of magma and meltwater from the ice causes phreatomagmatic explosive activity.
Grímsvötn is a basaltic volcano which has the highest eruption frequency of all the volcanoes in Iceland. It has a southwest-northeast-trending fissure system. The massive climate-impacting [[Laki]] fissure eruption of 1783–1784 took place in a part of the same Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system.<ref name=CIV>{{cite web|title =Grímsvötn Alternative name: Grímsvötn-Laki|first1 =Magnús T.|last1 =Guðmundsson|first2 = Guðrún|last2 =Larsen|url =https://icelandicvolcanoes.is/index.html?volcano=GRV|access-date=31 March 2024|year =2019}}</ref> Grímsvötn was erupting at the same time as Laki during 1783, but continued to erupt until 1785. Because most of the volcanic system lies underneath Vatnajökull, most of its eruptions have been [[Subglacial eruption|subglacial]] and the interaction of magma and meltwater from the ice causes [[phreatomagmatic eruption|phreatomagmatic]] explosive activity.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Jude-Eton |first1=T. C. |last2=Thordarson |first2=T. |last3=Gudmundsson |first3=M. T. |last4=Oddsson |first4=B. |date=2012-03-08 |title=Dynamics, stratigraphy and proximal dispersal of supraglacial tephra during the ice-confined 2004 eruption at Grímsvötn Volcano, Iceland |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-012-0583-3 |journal=Bulletin of Volcanology |volume=74 |issue=5 |pages=1057–1082 |doi=10.1007/s00445-012-0583-3 |bibcode=2012BVol...74.1057J |s2cid=128678427 |issn=0258-8900}}</ref> Within the Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system is a second central volcano called [[Thordarhyrna]] (Þórðarhyrna).<ref name=CIVt>{{cite web|title =Þórðarhyrna central volcano (Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system) e: Thordarhyrna|first1 =Magnús T.|last1 =Guðmundsson|first2 = Guðrún|last2 =Larsen|url =https://icelandicvolcanoes.is/index.html?volcano=THO|access-date=31 March 2024|year =2019}}</ref>


== Jökulhlaup ==
On 21 May 2011 at 19:25 [[Universal Coordinated Time|UTC]], an eruption began, with {{convert|12|km|mi|abbr=on|adj=on}} high [[Eruption column|plumes]] accompanied by multiple [[earthquake]]s,<ref name=Helgason>{{cite web|author=Njörður Helgason |url=http://mbl.is/frettir/innlent/2011/05/21/buid_ad_loka_skeidararsandi/ |title=Vegurinn um Skeiðarársand lokaður |publisher=mbl.is |date=2011-04-14 |accessdate=2011-05-22}}</ref><ref name=aljazeera>{{cite web|url=http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2011/05/2011521223345828845.html |title=Iceland's most active volcano erupts - Europe |publisher=Al Jazeera English |date=2011-05-21|accessdate=2011-05-22}}</ref><ref name=icenews>{{cite web|url=http://www.icenews.is/index.php/2011/05/21/iceland-volcanic-eruption-not-linked-to-the-end-of-the-world/ |title=Iceland volcanic eruption ‘not linked to the end of the world’ &#124; IceNews - Daily News |publisher=Icenews.is |date= |accessdate=2011-05-22}}</ref> disrupting air travel in Iceland,<ref>[http://www.eurocontrol.int/ Eurocontrol news statements]</ref> and in Greenland, Scotland and Norway on 22-23 May. The eruption scale has been much larger than that of the 2010 eruption of [[Eyjafjallajokull]] <ref>http://www.jonfr.com/volcano/?p=969#comments</ref> <ref>http://www.ruv.is/frett/ekkert-akvedid-um-folksflutninga</ref>.
Eruptions in the caldera regularly cause glacial outbursts known as [[jökulhlaup]].<ref>{{cite thesis|url=http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=991146220&dok_var=d1&dok_ext=pdf&filename=991146220.pdf |title=PhD Dissertation: Volcanotectonic Evolution and Characteristic Volcanism of the Neovolcanic Zone of Iceland |access-date=2011-05-24 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120309212602/http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=991146220&dok_var=d1&dok_ext=pdf&filename=991146220.pdf |archive-date=2012-03-09 |publisher =Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen|first1 = R. E. B.|last1= Andrew|year =2008|pages=1–122}} {{rp|loc=pages 38,39, Jökulhlaup figure 8.1}}</ref> Eruptions or geothermal activity, melt enough ice to fill the Grímsvötn caldera with water, and the pressure may be enough to suddenly lift the ice cap, allowing huge quantities of water to escape rapidly. Earthquakes and seismic tremor may occur.<ref name=IWOGrimsvotn>{{cite web|title =Flood tremor gradually increasing|url =https://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/glacial-flood-jokulhlaup-has-started-from-grimsvotn |access-date =13 January 2023|date =12 January 2023}}</ref> Jökulhlaup can occur independent of eruptions or be followed by eruptions.<ref name=IWOGrimsvotn/> Jökulhlaup independent of eruptions occurred in November, December 2021 and October 2022.<ref name=IWOGrimsvotn/> Jökulhlaup which were followed by eruptions occurred in 1922, 1934 and 2004.<ref name=IWOGrimsvotn/> Consequently, the Grímsvötn caldera is monitored very carefully.


When a large eruption occurred in 1996, [[geologist]]s knew well in advance that a glacial burst was imminent. It did not occur until several weeks after the eruption finished, but monitoring<ref>{{cite journal |first1=Andrew J. |last1=Russell |first2=Andrew R. |last2=Gregory |first3=Andrew R. G. |last3=Large |first4=P. Jay |last4=Fleisher |first5=Timothy D. |last5=Harris |title=Tunnel channel formation during the November 1996 jökulhlaup, Skeiðarárjökull, Iceland |journal=Annals of Glaciology |year=2007 |volume=45 |issue=1 |pages=95–103 |doi=10.3189/172756407782282552 |bibcode = 2007AnGla..45...95R |doi-access=free }}</ref> ensured that the Icelandic ring road ([[Hringvegur]]) was closed when the burst occurred. A section of road across the [[Skeiðará]] [[Outwash plain|sandur]] was washed away in the ensuing flood, but no one was hurt.
== Jökulhlaups ==
{{see also|Jökulhlaup}}
{{Unreferenced section|date=May 2011}}
[[Subglacial eruption]]s regularly give rise to glacial bursts as [[jökulhlaup]]s. Eruptions may melt enough ice to fill the Grímsvötn [[caldera]] with water, and the pressure may be enough to suddenly lift the icecap, allowing huge quantities of water to escape rapidly. Consequently, the Grímsvötn caldera is monitored very carefully. When a large eruption occurred in 1996, [[geologist]]s knew well in advance that a glacial burst was imminent. It did not occur until several weeks after the eruption finished, but monitoring ensured that the Icelandic ring road ([[Hringvegur]]) was closed when the burst occurred. A section of road across the [[Skeiðará]] [[sandur]] was washed away in the ensuing flood, but no one was hurt.


== Eruption history between 1990 and today ==
== 1998 & 2004 eruptions ==
=== Gjálp 1996 ===
''(See also the main article: [[1996 eruption of Gjálp]]''

The Gjálp [[fissure vent]] eruption in 1996 revealed that an interaction may exist between [[Bárðarbunga]] and Grímsvötn. A strong earthquake at Bárðarbunga, about magnitude 5, is believed to have been related to the triggering of the eruption in Gjálp.<ref>{{cite journal|last1 =Konstantinou|first1 =K.I.|last2 =Utami|first2 =I.W.|last3 =Giannopoulos|first3 =D|last4 =Sokos|first4 =E.|year =2019|title =A reappraisal of seismicity recorded during the 1996 Gjálp eruption, Iceland, in light of the 2014–2015 Bárðarbunga–Holuhraun lateral dike intrusion|journal =Pure and Applied Geophysics|volume =177|issue =6|pages =2579-2595|doi =10.1007/s00024-019-02387-x|bibcode =2019PApGe.177.2579K}}</ref> On the other hand, because the magma erupted showed strong connections to the Grímsvötn Volcanic System according to petrology studies, the 1996 as well as a former eruption at Gjálp in the 1930s are thought to have taken place within Grímsvötn Volcanic system.<ref>See eg.: [https://skemman.is/bitstream/1946/29117/1/BS_ritger%C3%B0_ElinMargretM_final.pdf Elín Margrét Magnúsdóttir: Gjóska úr Grímsvötnum 2011 og Bárðarbungu 2014-2015 : Ásýndar- ogkornastærðargreining. BS ritgerð. Jarðvísindadeild Háskóli Íslands (2017)] (in Icelandic, abstract also in English) Retrieved 24 August 2020.</ref><ref>See also: [http://www.geo.tu-freiberg.de/oberseminar/os07_08/AnneSch%F6pa.pdf Anne Schöpa: Subglacial volcanism with examples from Iceland. TU Freiberg. (2008)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170517105044/http://www.geo.tu-freiberg.de/oberseminar/os07_08/AnneSch%F6pa.pdf |date=2017-05-17 }}</ref>

=== 1998 and 2004 eruptions ===
<!-- new photographs needed [[File:Iceland Grimsvoetn 1972-B.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Grímsvötn in summer]]
<!-- new photographs needed [[File:Iceland Grimsvoetn 1972-B.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Grímsvötn in summer]]
[[File:grimsvotn volcano.jpg|thumb|300px|Ash plume from Grímsvötn Volcano, November 2, 2004]] -->
[[File:grimsvotn volcano.jpg|thumb|300px|Ash plume from Grímsvötn Volcano, November 2, 2004]] -->
A week-long eruption occurred at Grímsvötn starting on 28 December 1998, but no glacial burst occurred. In November 2004, a week-long eruption occurred. [[Volcanic ash]] from the eruption fell as far away as mainland [[Europe]] and caused short-term disruption of airline traffic into Iceland, but again no glacial burst followed the eruption.
[[File:NASA Photo Grímsvötn Nov. 2004.jpg|thumb|right|Satellite images of the November 2004 Grímsvötn Eruption. The lower image assigns a false color (red) to the surface ice.]]
A week-long eruption occurred at Grímsvötn starting on 28 December 1998, but no glacial burst occurred. In November 2004, a week-long eruption occurred. [[Volcanic ash]] from the eruption fell as far away as mainland Europe and caused short-term disruption of airline traffic into Iceland, but again no glacial burst followed the eruption.


== 2010 glacial flood ==
=== 2011 eruption ===
{{Main|2011 eruption of Grímsvötn}}
[[Harmonic tremors]] were recorded twice around Grímsvötn on 2 and 3 October 2010, possibly indicating an impending eruption.<ref name=jonfr>{{cite web|url=http://www.jonfr.com/volcano/?p=44 |title=Possible Harmonic tremor pulse at Grímsfjall volcano &#124; Iceland Volcano and Earthquake blog |publisher=Jonfr.com |date=2010-10-02 |accessdate=2011-05-22}}</ref> At the same time, sudden inflation was measured by [[GPS]] in the volcano, indicating magma movement under the mountain. On 1 November 2010 meltwater from the Vatnajökull glacier was flowing into the lake, suggesting that an eruption of the underlying volcano might be imminent.
[[Harmonic tremor]]s were recorded twice around Grímsvötn on 2 and 3&nbsp;October 2010, possibly indicating an impending eruption.<ref name=jonfr>{{cite web |url=http://www.jonfr.com/volcano/?p=44 |title=Possible Harmonic tremor pulse at Grímsfjall volcano &#124; Iceland Volcano and Earthquake blog |publisher=Jonfr.com |date=2010-10-02 |access-date=22 May 2011 |archive-date=2010-10-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101010183902/http://www.jonfr.com/volcano/?p=44 |url-status=dead }}</ref> At the same time, sudden [[Deformation (volcanology)|inflation]] was measured by [[GPS]] in the volcano, indicating magma movement under the caldera. On 1&nbsp;November 2010 meltwater from the Vatnajökull glacier was flowing into a lake, suggesting that an eruption of the underlying volcano could be imminent.


[[File:Grímsvötn Volcano Showing Plume - May 22.jpg|thumb|right|Satellite image from 22 May 2011 of the volcanic plume above Iceland]]
==2011 eruption==
[[File:Grimsvötn ash cloud.jpg|thumb|right|View of Icelandic landscape beneath the ash-cloud during the 2011 eruption]]
{{current|section}}
[[File:Grimsvötn August 2011.jpg|thumb|Grímsvötn in August 2011. Ash covering the surrounding snow and ice]]
[[Harmonic tremor|Harmonic tremors]] were recorded twice around Grímsvötn on 2 and 3 October 2010, possibly indicating an impending eruption.<ref name=jonfr/> At the same time, sudden inflation was measured by [[GPS]] in the volcano, indicating magma movement under the mountain. On 1 November 2010 meltwater from the Vatnajökull glacier was flowing into the lake, suggesting that an eruption of the underlying volcano might be imminent.


On 21 May 2011 at 19:25 [[Universal Coordinated Time|UTC]], [[2011 eruption of Grímsvötn|an eruption]] began, with {{convert|12|km|mi|0|abbr=on|adj=on}} high [[Eruption column|plumes]] accompanied by multiple [[earthquake]]s,<ref>[http://www.ruv.is/grimsvotn Eldgos í Grímsvötnum] {{Webarchive|url=http://wayback.vefsafn.is/wayback/20110803000000/www.ruv.is/grimsvotn |date=2011-08-03 }}, 24 May 2011 (in Icelandic)</ref><ref name=Helgason>{{cite web|author=Njörður Helgason |url=http://mbl.is/frettir/innlent/2011/05/21/buid_ad_loka_skeidararsandi/ |title=Vegurinn um Skeiðarársand lokaður |publisher=mbl.is |date=14 April 2011 |access-date=22 May 2011}}</ref><ref name=aljazeera>{{cite web |url= http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2011/05/2011521223345828845.html |title=Iceland's most active volcano erupts – Europe |publisher=Al Jazeera English |date=21 May 2011|access-date=22 May 2011}}</ref><ref name=icenews>{{cite web |url=http://www.icenews.is/index.php/2011/05/21/iceland-volcanic-eruption-not-linked-to-the-end-of-the-world/ |title=Iceland volcanic eruption 'not linked to the end of the world' &#124; IceNews – Daily News |publisher=Icenews.is |access-date=22 May 2011 |archive-date=24 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110524011802/http://www.icenews.is/index.php/2011/05/21/iceland-volcanic-eruption-not-linked-to-the-end-of-the-world/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Until 25 May, the eruption scale had been larger than that of the [[2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajökull|2010 eruption]] of [[Eyjafjallajökull]].
On 21 May 2011 at 19:25 [[Universal Coordinated Time|UTC]], an eruption began, with {{convert|12|km|mi|abbr=on|adj=on}} high [[Eruption column|plumes]] accompanied by multiple [[earthquake]]s.<ref name=Helgason/><ref name=aljazeera/><ref name=icenews/>
The ash cloud from the eruption rose to 20km/12 miles, and is so far 10 times larger than the 2004 eruption, and the strongest in Grímsvötn for 100 years.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.icelandreview.com/icelandreview/daily_news/Largest_Volcanic_Eruption_in_Gr%C3%ADmsv%C3%B6tn_in_100_Years_0_378079.news.aspx|title=Largest Volcanic Eruption in Grímsvötn in 100 Years|publisher=Iceland Review Online|work=Daily News|date=2011-05-22|accessdate=2011-05-22}}</ref>
The ash cloud from the eruption rose to {{convert|20|km|abbr=on}}, and was so far 10&nbsp;times larger than the 2004 eruption, and the strongest in Grímsvötn in the last 100&nbsp;years.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.icelandreview.com/icelandreview/daily_news/Largest_Volcanic_Eruption_in_Gr%C3%ADmsv%C3%B6tn_in_100_Years_0_378079.news.aspx |title=Largest Volcanic Eruption in Grímsvötn in 100 Years |publisher=Iceland Review Online |work=Daily News |date=22 May 2011 |access-date=22 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110524001735/http://icelandreview.com/icelandreview/daily_news/Largest_Volcanic_Eruption_in_Gr%C3%ADmsv%C3%B6tn_in_100_Years_0_378079.news.aspx |archive-date=24 May 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


[[File:Iceland’s Grimsvotn Volcano.jpg|thumb|right|Satellite image from 23 May 2011 of the ash-cloud to the south of Iceland]]
During 22 May the ash plume fell to around 10 km altitude, rising occasionally to 15 km.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/2011/nr/2177|title=Ash plume and lightning|publisher=Icelandic Met Office|date=2011-05-22|accessdate=2011-05-23}}</ref>
Disruption to air travel in Iceland<ref name="eurocontrol1">[http://www.eurocontrol.int/ Eurocontrol news]</ref> commenced on 22&nbsp;May, followed by Greenland, Scotland,<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-13508368 Scottish flights grounded by Iceland volcanic ash cloud], BBC, 23 May 2011</ref> Norway, [[Svalbard]]<ref>[http://theforeigner.no/pages/news/iceland-eruption-hits-norwegian-flights/ Iceland eruption hits Norwegian flights], The Foreigner, 23 May 2011</ref> and a small part of Denmark on subsequent days. On 24 May the disruption spread to Northern Ireland and to airports in northern England.<ref name="eurocontrol1"/> The cancellation of 900 out of 90,000 European flights<ref name=Flightglobal>{{cite web|url=http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2011/05/26/357246/european-proceedures-cope-with-new-ash-cloud.html|title=European proceedures (sic) cope with new ash cloud|date=26 May 2011|work=Flightglobal|author=David Learmount|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150703022217/http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/european-proceedures-cope-with-new-ash-cloud-357246/|archive-date=July 3, 2015|url-status=dead|access-date=September 28, 2015}}</ref> in the period 23–25 May was much less widespread than the [[Air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption|2010 disruption]] after the [[Eyjafjallajökull]] eruption.


The eruption stopped at 02:40 UTC on 25 May 2011, although there was some explosive activity from the [[Hydrothermal vent|eruptive vents]] affecting only the area around the crater.<ref name="Met Office UK">{{cite web|title=Volcanic Ash Advisory at 1241 on 25 May 2011|url=http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/aviation/vaac/data/VAG_1306323708.png|publisher=Met Office UK|access-date=25 May 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Iceland volcano ash: German air traffic resuming|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13535054|publisher=BBC News|access-date=25 May 2011|date=25 May 2011}}</ref><ref name="Iceland Met Office">{{cite web|title=Update on volcanic activity in Grímsvötn|url=http://en.vedur.is/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/2180|publisher=Iceland Met Office|access-date=27 May 2011}}</ref>
As of writing, the eruption has been releasing about 2000 tons of ash per second, making it 120 million tons in the first 48 hours <ref>http://www.ruv.is/frett/ekkert-akvedid-um-folksflutninga</ref>. This makes the 2011 eruption of Grimsvotn a confortable VEI4 in the scale of volcanic explosive index ([[VEI]]), releasing more ash in the first 48 hours than Eyjafjallajokull during its entire 2010 eruption <ref>http://www.jonfr.com/volcano/?p=969#comments</ref>.


=== 2020 onward threats of eruption ===
===Disruption to Air Travel===
In June 2020, the [[Icelandic Meteorological Office]] (IMO) issued a warning that an eruption might take place in the coming weeks or months, following scientists reporting high levels of [[sulfur dioxide]], which is indicative of the presence of shallow magma. IMO warned that a glacial flood as a result of melting ice could trigger an eruption.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Evidences that Grímsvötn volcano is getting ready for the next eruption {{!}} News|url=https://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/evidences-that-grimsvotn-volcano-is-getting-ready-for-the-next-eruption|access-date=2020-08-05|website=Icelandic Meteorological office|language=en}}</ref> No eruption occurred.


In September 2021, an increase in water outflow from under the Vatnajökull ice cap was reported. The water contains elevated levels of dissolved hydrogen sulfide, suggesting increased volcanic activity under the ice.<ref>{{cite news |title=Grimsvötn volcano (Iceland): subglacial meltwater flood in progress |website=Volcano Discovery |url=https://www.volcanodiscovery.com/grimsvoetn/news/140247/Grimsvoetn-volcano-Iceland-subglacial-meltwater-flood-in-progress.html |access-date=9 September 2021 |date=3 September 2021}}</ref> Jökulhlaup (glacial lake flooding) can occur before or after an eruption.
Disruption air travel in Iceland<ref>[http://www.eurocontrol.int/ Eurocontrol news]</ref> commenced on 21 May, followed by Greenland, Scotland<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-13508368 Scottish flights grounded by Iceland volcanic ash cloud]</ref> and Norway (Svalbard)<ref>[http://theforeigner.no/pages/news/iceland-eruption-hits-norwegian-flights/ Iceland eruption hits Norwegian flights]</ref> on subsequent days.

On 4 December 2021, a jökulhlaup occurred from Grímsvötn into the Gígjukvísl river, with an average flow of {{convert|2600|m3/s|abbr=on}}. Two days later, the Icelandic Meteorological Office increased the alert level for Grímsvötn from yellow to orange, after a series of earthquakes was detected. On 7 December, the alert level was lowered back to yellow, after seismic activity decreased and no signs of eruptive activity were detected.<ref>{{cite web|url =https://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/icesheet-in-grimsvotn-subsiding|access-date=13 January 2023|title =IWO:Flood in Grímsvötn|date =8 December 2021}}</ref>

On 11 December 2023, a jökulhlaup followed in time,<ref name=IWOGrimsvotn/> a {{M|w|4.5|link=yes}} earthquake.<ref>{{cite web|title=UGS:M 4.5 - 109 km W of Höfn, Iceland|url =https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/us6000m318/executive |access-date=13 January 2023}}</ref>

== Eruption history before 1990 ==
Tephra studies on soil samples from around the Vatnajökull ice-cap, show that the Grímsvötn volcanic system has high activity for Iceland, and had between 4 to 14 explosive eruptions every 100 years (mean about 7 eruptions every 100 years) between 7600 years ago and 870 AD.<ref>{{cite journal|last1 =Óladóttir|first1 =B.A.|last2 =Larsen|first2 =G.|last3 =Sigmarsson|first3 =O.|year =2011|title =Holocene volcanic activity at Grímsvötn, Bárdarbunga and Kverkfjöll subglacial centres beneath Vatnajökull, Iceland|journal =Bulletin of Volcanology|volume =73|issue =9|pages =1187–1208|doi =10.1007/s00445-011-0461-4|bibcode =2011BVol...73.1187O}}{{rp|p=1187}}</ref> For technical reasons only the last 10,200 years of explosive eruptions have been characterised locally,<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016>{{cite journal|last1 =Gudmundsdóttir|first1 =E.R.|last2 =Larsen|first2 =G.|last3 =Björck|first3 =S.|last4 =Ingólfsson|first4 =Ó|last5 =Striberger|first5 =J.|year =2016|title =A new high-resolution Holocene tephra stratigraphy in eastern Iceland: Improving the Icelandic and North Atlantic tephrochronology|journal =Quaternary Science Reviews|volume =150|pages =234–249|doi =10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.08.011}}{{rp|loc=Table 4}}</ref> and the record gets more inaccurate with time especially prior to 1598, which is first eruption timed to the day.<ref name=gvp/> The Laki eruptions which were both effusive and explosive between June 1783 and February 1784,<ref name=Bindeman2008>{{cite journal|last1 =Bindeman|first1 =I.|last2 =Gurenko|first2 =A.|last3 =Sigmarsson|first3 =O.|last4 =Chaussidon|first4 =M.|year =2008|title =Oxygen isotope heterogeneity and disequilibria of olivine crystals in large volume Holocene basalts from Iceland: evidence for magmatic digestion and erosion of Pleistocene hyaloclastites|journal =Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta|volume =72|issue =17|pages =4397–4420|doi =10.1016/j.gca.2008.06.010|bibcode =2008GeCoA..72.4397B}}</ref> produced the Skaftáreldahraun lava flows, which cover a large part of south-east Iceland.<ref name=CIV/> Before this the tip of the Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system was active with the production of the 4550 BCE Botnahraun lava flow which extends beyond the furtherest extent to the south of the Laki lava field.<ref name=CIV/> The Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system also formed the Núpahraun lava flows around 4000 {{abbr|BP|before present, i.e. 1950 CE}}<ref name=Bindeman2008/> that extend from the Vatnajökull glacier towards the south east coast and are covered in part by the northern Laki Skaftáreldahraun lava flow.<ref name=CIV/> There are two recent pre-historic but undated Bergvatnsárhraun lava flows just on the south-eastern edge of the Vatnajökull glacier, related to the line of the Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissures.<ref name=CIV/>

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|+ Eruptions Grímsvötn volcanic system last 10,000 years (unconfirmed eruptions not shown)
|-
! data-sort-type="number"| Standard Date !! class="unsortable" | Date {{abbr|Cal BP|calibrated year before 1950}} !! Lake Lögurinn tephra thickness !! [[Volcanic explosivity index|VEI]] !! Comment
|-
|2011|| - || - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #F90;" |4||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|2004|| - || - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FC0;" |3||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1998|| - || - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FC0;" |3||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1996|| - || - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FC0;" |3||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1983|| - || - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1954|| - || - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FE0;" |1||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1938||{{#expr: 1950-1938}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #F90;" |4||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1934||{{#expr: 1950-1934}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1933||{{#expr: 1950-1933}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FE0;" |1||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-28}}||28||{{cvt|9|cm|in}}||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>,Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|1919||{{#expr: 1950-1919}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1910||{{#expr: 1950-1910}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1897||{{#expr: 1950-1897}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1891||{{#expr: 1950-1991}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1883||{{#expr: 1950-1883}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1873||{{#expr: 1950-1873}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #F90;" |4||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1867||{{#expr: 1950-1867}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FE0;" |1||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1854||{{#expr: 1950-1854}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1838||{{#expr: 1950-1838}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1816||{{#expr: 1950-1816}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1783||{{#expr: 1950-1783}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #F90;" |4||<ref name=gvp/> [[Laki]] eruption.
|-
|1774||{{#expr: 1950-1774}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1768||{{#expr: 1950-1768}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1753||{{#expr: 1950-1753}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1730||{{#expr: 1950-1730}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1725||{{#expr: 1950-1725}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1716||{{#expr: 1950-1716}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1706||{{#expr: 1950-1706}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1697||{{#expr: 1950-1697}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1684||{{#expr: 1950-1684}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1681||{{#expr: 1950-1681}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1665||{{#expr: 1950-1665}}||{{cvt|7|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>Approx 280 BP eruption Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|1659||{{#expr: 1950-1659}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1638||{{#expr: 1950-1638}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1632||{{#expr: 1950-1632}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1629||{{#expr: 1950-1629}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1622||{{#expr: 1950-1622}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1619||{{#expr: 1950-1619}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1610||{{#expr: 1950-1610}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1603||{{#expr: 1950-1603}}||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - || Approx 345 BP eruption - Oct 1603 Lake Lögurinn core<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|1598||{{#expr: 1950-1598}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FC0;" |3||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1530±10||{{#expr: 1950-1530}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1521||{{#expr: 1950-1521}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-440}}||440|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-442}}||442||{{cvt|8|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-450}}||450|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|1500||{{#expr: 1950-1500}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1490±10||{{#expr: 1950-1490}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1471||{{#expr: 1950-1471}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1470±10||{{#expr: 1950-1470}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1469||{{#expr: 1950-1469}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1450±10||{{#expr: 1950-1450}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1430±10||{{#expr: 1950-1430}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1390±10||{{#expr: 1950-1390}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1370±10||{{#expr: 1950-1370}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1369||{{#expr: 1950-1369}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-596}}||596|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/><ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1350||{{#expr: 1950-1350}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1341||{{#expr: 1950-1341}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1332||{{#expr: 1950-1332}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1310±10||{{#expr: 1950-1310}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1290±10||{{#expr: 1950-1290}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1270±10||{{#expr: 1950-1270}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1230±10||{{#expr: 1950-1230}}±10|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|1190||{{#expr: 1950-1190}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-788}}||788||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|1090||{{#expr: 1950-1090}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-900}}||900||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|1010||{{#expr: 1950-1010}}|| - ||align="center"!| - ||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-973}}||973||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core. Has some Veidivötn-[[Bárdarbunga]] compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1065}}||1065|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>{{efn|name=date871877}}
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1092}}||1092||{{cvt|9|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>{{efn|name=date871877}}
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1097}}||1097||{{cvt|3|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>{{efn|name=date871877}}
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1098}}||1098||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>{{efn|name=date871877}}
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1100}}||1100||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core. Has also [[Kverkfjöll]], Veidivötn-[[Bárdarbunga]] compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>{{efn|name=date871877}}
|-
|781||{{#expr: 1950-781}}||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Greenland, Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gabriel2024/>{{efn|name=date871877|Timings published before 2017 for eruptions between around 700 to 900 are likely inaccurate but need a source to update. Accordingly where the tephra layer is in publications based on Greenland ice core studies since then, dates have been adjusted.<ref name=Gabriel2024>{{cite journal|last1 =Gabriel|first1 =I.|last2 =Plunkett|first2 =G.|last3 =Abbott|first3 =P.M.|last4 =Behrens|first4 =M.|last5 =Burke|first5 =A.|last6 =Chellman|first6 = N.|last7 =Cook|first7 =E.|last8 =Fleitmann|first8 =D.|last9 =Hörhold|first9 =M.|last10 =Hutchison|first10 =W.|last11 =McConnell|first11 =J.R.|year =2024|title =Decadal-to-centennial increases of volcanic aerosols from Iceland challenge the concept of a Medieval Quiet Period|journal =Communications Earth & Environment|volume =5|issue =1|pages =194|doi =10.1038/s43247-024-01350-6|bibcode =2024ComEE...5..194G|doi-access =free}}</ref> Unadjusted timings based on Gudmundsdóttir et al 2016 could be inaccurate.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>Literature timings were adjusted after the Icelandic tree ring series was extended to 822.<ref name=Büntgen2017>{{cite journal|last1 =Büntgen|first1 =U.|last2 =Eggertsson|first2 =Ó.|last3 =Wacker|first3 =L.|last4 =Sigl|first4 =M.|last5 =Ljungqvist|first5 =F.C.|last6 =Di Cosmo|first6 =N.|last7 =Plunkett|first17 =G.|last8 =Krusic|first8 =P.J.|last9 =Newfield|first9 =T.P.|last10 =Esper|first10 =J.|last11 =Lane|first11 =C.|year =2017|title = Multi-proxy dating of Iceland's major pre-settlement Katla eruption to 822–823 CE|journal =Geology|volume =45|issue =9|pages =783–786|doi =10.1130/G39269.1|bibcode =2017Geo....45..783B}}</ref>}}
|-
|753||{{#expr: 1950-753}}||-||align="center"!| - ||Greenland core<ref name=Gabriel2024/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1448}}||1448||{{cvt|9|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1647}}||1647||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1670}}||1670||{{cvt|4|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell, Svartárkort & marine cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1734}}||1734||{{cvt|6|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|{{#expr: 1950-1767}}||1767||{{cvt|1|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-1968}}</span>{{#expr: 1968-1950}}±100&nbsp;BCE||1968±100||{{cvt|3|cm|in}}||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>Lake Lögurinn core. Has some Veidivötn-[[Bárdarbunga]] compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned <ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-2539}}</span>{{#expr: 2539-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||2539||{{cvt|7|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-2750}}</span>{{#expr: 2750-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||2750||{{cvt|4|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell & marine cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-2784}}</span>{{#expr: 2784-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||2784||{{cvt|9|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell & marine cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">-1950</span>1950&nbsp;BCE||{{#expr: 1950+1950}}|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #FD0;" |2||<ref name=gvp/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-4356}}</span>{{#expr: 4356-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||4356||{{cvt|4|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-4651}}</span>{{#expr: 4651-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||4651||{{cvt|1|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-5293}}</span>{{#expr: 5293-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||5293||{{cvt|9|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core. Has some [[Kverkfjöll]] compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-5557}}</span>{{#expr: 5557-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||5557||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-5661}}</span>{{#expr: 5661-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||5661||{{cvt|4|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Snæfell cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-5695}}</span>{{#expr: 5695-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||5695||{{cvt|7|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores. Has some Veidivötn-[[Bárdarbunga]] compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6067}}</span>{{#expr: 6067-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6067||{{cvt|7|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell & marine cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6137}}</span>{{#expr: 6137-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6137||{{cvt|1|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core. Trace possible in a Kárahnjúkar core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6226}}</span>{{#expr: 6226-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6226||{{cvt|7|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn. Possibly in a Kárahnjúkar core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6283}}</span>{{#expr: 6283-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6283||{{cvt|7|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core. Possibly in a Kárahnjúkar core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6288}}</span>{{#expr: 6288-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6288||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn. Trace possible in a Kárahnjúkar core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6624}}</span>{{#expr: 6624-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6624|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6688}}</span>{{#expr: 6688-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6688||{{cvt|8|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-6799}}</span>{{#expr: 6799-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||6799||{{cvt|7|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-7023}}</span>{{#expr: 7023-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||7023||{{cvt|6|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Svartárkort cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-7708}}</span>{{#expr: 7708-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||7708||{{cvt|3|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-7780}}</span>{{#expr: 7780-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||7780|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-7839}}</span>{{#expr: 7839-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||7839||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-8176}}</span>{{#expr: 7839-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||8176||{{cvt|1|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-8642}}</span>{{#expr: 8642-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||8642||{{cvt|6|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-8645}}</span>{{#expr: 8645-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||8645||{{cvt|9|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core a possibly in Svartárkort core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-8666}}</span>{{#expr: 8666-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||8666||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-8826}}</span>{{#expr: 8826-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||8826||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9058}}</span>{{#expr: 9058-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9058||{{cvt|9|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9086}}</span>{{#expr: 9086-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9086||{{cvt|8|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9112}}</span>{{#expr: 9112-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9112||{{cvt|6|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9121}}</span>{{#expr: 9121-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9121||{{cvt|6|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Svartárkort cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9130}}</span>{{#expr: 9130-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9130||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Svartárkort cores<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9184}}</span>{{#expr: 9184-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9184||{{cvt|3|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9268}}</span>{{#expr: 9268-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9268||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9344}}</span>{{#expr: 9344-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9344||{{cvt|3|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Has some Veidivötn-[[Bárdarbunga]] compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned. Lake Lögurinn & Snæfell cores<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9433}}</span>{{#expr: 9433-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9433||{{cvt|8|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core. Possibly in Snæfell core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> Tholeiite basalt G9410 tephra in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9410 ± 340 BP.<ref name=Harning2024>{{cite journal|last1 =Harning|first1 =D.J.|last2 =Florian|first2 =C.R.|last3 =Geirsdóttir|first3 =Á.|last4 =Thordarson|first4 =T.|last5 =Miller|first5 = G.H.|last6 =Axford|first6 =Y.|last7 =Ólafsdóttir|first7 =S.|year =2024|title =High-resolution Holocene record from Torfdalsvatn, north Iceland, reveals natural and anthropogenic impacts on terrestrial and aquatic environments|journal =Climate of the Past Discussions|pages =1–41|doi =10.5194/cp-2024-26|doi-access =free}}</ref>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9486}}</span>{{#expr: 9486-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9486||{{cvt|4|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9527}}</span>{{#expr: 9527-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9527||{{cvt|8|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9535}}</span>{{#expr: 9535-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9535||{{cvt|6|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9653}}</span>{{#expr: 9653-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9653||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> Tholeiite basalt tephra G9630 in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9630 ± 350 BP.<ref name=Harning2024/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|name=G10a}}
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9776}}</span>{{#expr: 9776-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9776||{{cvt|2|cm|in}}|| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Svartárkort cores<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> Tholeiite basalt tephra G9740 in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9740 ± 320 BP.<ref name=Harning2024/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|name=G10a}}
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9849}}</span>{{#expr: 9849-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9849|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn & Kirkjugardur cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> Tholeiite basalt tephra G9850 in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9850 ± 300 BP.<ref name=Harning2024/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|name=G10a}}
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-9869}}</span>{{#expr: 9869-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||9869||{{cvt|1|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Svartárkort & Kirkjugardur cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|name=G10a}}
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-10003}}</span>{{#expr: 10003-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||10003||{{cvt|6|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn core.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|name=G10a}}
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-10019}}</span>{{#expr: 10019-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||10019||{{cvt|5|cm|in}}||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Svartárkort & Kirkjugardur cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|name=G10a}}
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-10198}}</span>{{#expr: 10198-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||10198|| - ||align="center"!| - ||Lake Lögurinn, Kirkjugardur cores.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|name=G10a}} Tholeiite basalt tephra in at least one of seven layers in Torfdalsvatn core.<ref name=Harning2024/>
|-
|<span style="display:none">{{#expr: 1950-10200}}</span>{{#expr: 10200-1950}}&nbsp;BCE||10200|| - ||align="center"! style="background-color: #F30;" |6||<ref name=gvp/>Also has some Borrobol tephra like compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned. Lake Lögurinn, Svartárkort, Litligardur & Reitsvík cores and may be the Fosen tephra identified of same age in Fosen, Norway<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> Tholeiite basalt tephra in several of seven layers in Torfdalsvatn core.<ref name=Harning2024/> May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.{{efn|The precise relationships with the G10ka series tephra from Grímsvötn aged between 10.4 to 9.9 ka BP which includes the Faroes Saksunarvatn Ash and appears to have at least 5 and up to 7 deposits is unclear as full correlation across all the potentially relevant tephra records in for example Iceland has not yet been undertaken. It is suspected that more than 20 eruptions of Grímsvötn took place in the G10ka time period.<ref>{{cite journal|last1 =Óladóttir|first1 =B.A.|last2 =Thordarson|first2 =T.|last3 =Geirsdóttir|first3 =Á.|last4 =Jóhannsdóttir|first4 =G.E.|last5 =Mangerud|first5 =J.|year =2020|title =The Saksunarvatn Ash and the G10ka series tephra. Review and current state of knowledge|journal =Quaternary Geochronology|volume=56|at=101041|doi =10.1016/j.quageo.2019.101041|bibcode =2020QuGeo..5601041O}}{{rp|loc=Discussion}}</ref> This note accordingly applies to all tephra layers potentially dated to within this age range.|name=G10a}}
|}


== Bacteria in the subglacial lakes ==
== Bacteria in the subglacial lakes ==
In summer 2004, [[bacteria]] were detected in the water of the Grímsvötn lakes under the glacier, the first time that bacteria were found in a subglacial lake.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/news040712-6|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|title=Glacial lake hides bacteria|author=Mark Peplow|date=2004-07-13|doi=10.1038/news040712-6 }}</ref> The lakes do not freeze totally because of the volcanic heat. The bacteria can also survive at low concentrations of [[oxygen]]. The site is a possible analogue for life on the [[planet]] [[Mars]], because there are also traces of volcanism and glaciers on Mars and thus the findings could help identify how to look for life on Mars.
In 2004, a community of [[bacteria]] was detected in water of the Grímsvötn lake under the glacier, the first time that bacteria have been found in a subglacial lake. The lakes never freeze because of the volcanic heat. The bacteria can also survive at low concentrations of [[oxygen]]. The site is a possible analogue for life on the [[planet]] [[Mars]], because there are also traces of volcanism and glaciers on Mars and thus the findings could help identify how to look for life on Mars.<ref>{{cite journal|pmid=15383238|year=2004|last1=Gaidos|first1=E|last2=Lanoil|first2=B|last3=Thorsteinsson|first3=T|last4=Graham|first4=A|last5=Skidmore|first5=M|last6=Han|first6=SK|last7=Rust|first7=T|last8=Popp|first8=B|title=A viable microbial community in a subglacial volcanic crater lake, Iceland.|volume=4|issue=3|pages=327–44|doi=10.1089/1531107041939529|journal=Astrobiology|doi-access=}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]] |title=Glacial lake hides bacteria |doi=10.1038/news040712-6|year=2004|last1=Peplow|first1=Mark |doi-access=free}}</ref>

== Geology ==
There is the potential for mechanical interaction such as [[dike (geology)|dyke]] propagation between Grímsvötn and Thordarhyrna.<ref name=Gudmundsson2007>{{cite journal|last1 =Gudmundsson|first1 =A.|last2 =Andrew|first2 =R.E.|year =2007|title =Mechanical interaction between active volcanoes in Iceland|journal=Geophysical Research Letters|volume =34 |issue =10|page =L10310|doi =10.1029/2007GL029873|bibcode=2007GeoRL..3410310G|doi-access=free}}</ref> Interactions can also occur with the nearby [[Bárðarbunga]] volcano, which is part of a separate volcanic system.<ref name=Gudmundsson2007 /> The volcano erupts predominantly [[tholeiitic basalt]],<ref name=CIV /> and a close chemical affinity exists with the other lavas of the Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system.<ref name=Manning2014>{{cite journal|last1 =Manning|first1 =C.J.|last2 =Thirlwall|first2 =M.F.|year=2014|title =Isotopic evidence for interaction between Öræfajökull mantle and the Eastern Rift Zone, Iceland|journal =Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology|volume =167|pages =1–22|doi =10.1007/s00410-013-0959-1|bibcode =2014CoMP..167..959M}}{{rp|p=958}}</ref> The compositional separation from nearby systems has been studied in some detail, and is used to assign lava and tephra deposits to the volcanic system.<ref name=Bindeman2008/><ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> Some of the tephra's erupted have transpired to have mixed compositions with nearby volcanic systems and it is not known if this is due to dual eruptions or intusions crossing magma reserviors.<ref name=Gudmundsdóttir2016/> The volcanic system is part of the [[Geological deformation of Iceland#Eastern volcanic zone|Eastern volcanic zone of Iceland]], and is directly over the [[Iceland hotspot|Iceland mantle plume]].<ref>{{Cite journal | url=http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0377027308004393 | publisher=Elsevier| journal=Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research| series=Volcanic Flows and Falls| date=20 November 2008| volume=177| issue=4| pages=1045–1054| doi=10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.07.025|last1 =Andrew| first1=Ruth E. B.|first2 =Agust|last2 =Gudmundsson|title =Volcanoes as elastic inclusions: their effects on the propagation of dykes, volcanic fissures, and volcanic zones in Iceland}}{{rp|loc=4. Mechanical interaction}}</ref> The volcanic system has crater rows extending to the south east; the {{cvt|25|km}} long [[Laki|Laki–Grímsvötn fissure system]] and the {{cvt|30|km}} long Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system.<ref name=Manning2014/><ref name=CIV /><ref name=CIVt /> The Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system has been related by some authors to an alignment with the Thordarhyrna central volcano with the Laki–Grímsvötn more in alignment with the Grímsvötn central volcano.<ref name=Bindeman2008/> Eruptives from Grímsvötn and Thordarhyrna are able to be geochemically distinguished between, so it is possible that the two central volcanoes are not one system.<ref>{{cite thesis|first =Iðunn Kara|last =Valdimarsdóttir|date =June 2023|title =Origin, extent, and emplacement conditions of newly exposed pillow lavas and hyaloclastites in the Kverkfjöll region, Iceland. M.S. thesis|pages=1–120|publisher =University of Iceland|url =https://skemman.is/bitstream/1946/44631/4/MS_Idunn_Kara_Valdimarsdottir_2023.pdf|access-date=31 August 2024}}{{rp|pages=36}}</ref> Thordarhyrna has rhyolite formations which have not been found at Grímsvötn.<ref>{{cite journal|last1 =Carley|first1 =T.|last2 =Banik|first2 =T.J.|last3 =Sigmarsson|first3 =O.|last4 =Halldorsson|first4 =S.A.|last5 =Valley|first5 =J.W.|last6 =Zhang|first16 =M.|last7 =Merritt|first7 =M.|last8 =Driggs|first8 =L.|year =2023|title =A Petrologic Introduction to Þórðarhyrna (Thordarhyrna), a Subglacial Silicic Formation in the Basaltic Grímsvötn-Laki Volcanic System|journal =AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts|volume =2023|issue =14|at=V21C-014|bibcode=2023AGUFM.V21C01.4C}}</ref>

== Future trends ==
Studies indicate that volcanic activity in Iceland rises and falls so that the frequency and size of eruptions in and around the Vatnajökull ice cap varies with time. It is believed that the four eruptions between 1996 and 2011 could mark the beginning of an active period, during which an eruption in Grímsvötn in Vatnajökull may be expected every 2–7 years. Parallel volcanic activity in nearby [[Bárðarbunga]] is known to be associated with increased activity in Grímsvötn. Seismic activity has been increasing in the area in recent years, indicating the entry of magma.<ref>{{cite web|title=Icelandic Met Office on 1 September 2011|url=http://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/2011/nr/2280|publisher=Icelandic Met Office|access-date=2 September 2011}}</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Volcanism in Iceland]]
* [[List of volcanoes in Iceland]]
* [[Geography of Iceland]]
* [[Geography of Iceland]]
* [[Glaciers of Iceland]]
* [[Glacial lake outburst flood]]
* [[Glacial lake outburst flood]]
* [[Iceland plume]]
* [[Iceland hotspot]]
* [[Iceland hotspot]]
* [[Lakes of Iceland]]
* [[Iceland plume]]
* [[List of glaciers of Iceland]]
* [[List of islands of Iceland]]
* [[List of islands of Iceland]]
* [[Timetable of major worldwide volcanic eruptions]]
* [[List of lakes of Iceland]]
* [[Plate tectonics]]
* [[Plate tectonics]]
* [[Timeline of volcanism on Earth]]
* [[Volcanism of Iceland]]
** [[List of volcanic eruptions in Iceland]]
** [[List of volcanoes in Iceland]]

{{Clear}}

== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}


==References==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Commons|Grímsvötn}}
{{Commons|Grímsvötn}}
* [http://icelandicvolcanoes.is/?volcano=GRV Grímsvötn] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170204165732/http://icelandicvolcanoes.is/?volcano=GRV |date=2017-02-04 }} in the Catalogue of Icelandic Volcanoes
* [http://en.vedur.is/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/2180 Update on Grímsvötn Activity] - from the Icelandic Met Office and University of Iceland (updated at least daily)
* [http://en.vedur.is/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/2180 Update on Grímsvötn Activity] – from the Icelandic Met Office and University of Iceland (updated at least daily)
* [http://en.vedur.is/earthquakes-and-volcanism/earthquakes/vatnajokull/ Current seismology around Grímsvötn] – Earthquakes in last 48 hours
* [http://en.vedur.is/earthquakes-and-volcanism/earthquakes/vatnajokull/ Current seismology around Grímsvötn] – Earthquakes in last 48 hours
* [https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13498477 BBC news report of the 23 May 2011 eruption]
* [http://www.eurocontrol.int/ Grímsvötn statement from Eurocontrol] European Air Traffic Control (updated frequently)
* [http://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/2011/nr/2174 Report on the 2011 start of the Grímsvötn eruption] from the Icelandic Met Office
* [http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/aviation/vaac/vaacuk_vag.html Grímsvötn volcanic ash advisory] from regional Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre, London (updated every 6 hours)
* [https://www.vatnajokulsthjodgardur.is/ Official Website of Vatnajökull National Park]
* [http://www.nats.co.uk/grimsvotn-updates/ Grímsvötn updates from NATS] - UK air traffic control plus the Eastern part of the North Atlantic
* [http://www.flightradar24.com/ Live air traffic and ash cloud position]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13498477 BBC news report of the 23 May 2011 eruption]
* [http://en.vedur.is/about-imo/news/2011/nr/2174 Report on the start of the Grímsvötn eruption] from the Icelandic Met Office
* {{cite gvp|1=1703-01=|2=Grímsvötn}}
* [http://www.lancs.ac.uk/ug/lloydca/formation.html Formation and emptying of glacier lakes]
* [http://millhouse.nl/grimsvotn2004.html Photo report of the November 2004 eruption]
* [http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=14&click_id=420&art_id=qw1099460701116T614 Independent news report of the 2004 eruption]
* [http://all-geo.org/volcan01010/2011/05/grimsvotn-eruption-frequently-asked-questions/ Grimsvötn eruption – frequently asked questions]


{{Lakes of Iceland}}
{{Lakes of Iceland}}
{{Volcanoes of Iceland}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Grimsvotn}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Grimsvotn}}
[[Category:Grímsvötn| ]]
[[Category:Active volcanoes]]
[[Category:Active volcanoes]]
[[Category:Highlands of Iceland]]
[[Category:Highlands of Iceland]]
[[Category:Subglacial volcanoes]]
[[Category:Subglacial volcanoes of Iceland]]
[[Category:Volcanoes of Iceland]]
[[Category:Volcanoes of Iceland]]
[[Category:VEI-6 volcanoes]]
[[Category:VEI-6 volcanoes]]
[[Category:Subglacial lakes]]
[[Category:Subglacial lakes]]
[[Category:Iceland East Volcanic Zone]]
[[Category:Lakes of Iceland]]
[[Category:East Volcanic Zone of Iceland]]

[[Category:Volcanic systems of Iceland]]
[[ar:جريمسفونت]]
[[Category:Subglacial calderas]]
[[az:Grimsvötn]]
[[Category:Calderas of Iceland]]
[[ca:Grímsvötn]]
[[Category:Jökulhlaups]]
[[cs:Grímsvötn]]
[[da:Grímsvötn]]
[[de:Grímsvötn]]
[[es:Grímsvötn]]
[[eu:Grímsvötn]]
[[fr:Grímsvötn]]
[[is:Grímsvötn]]
[[it:Grímsvötn]]
[[ka:გრიმსვოტნი]]
[[nl:Grímsvötn]]
[[ja:グリームスヴォトン]]
[[no:Grímsvötn]]
[[nn:Grímsvötn]]
[[pl:Grímsvötn]]
[[pt:Grímsvötn]]
[[ro:Grímsvötn]]
[[ru:Гримсвотн]]
[[sk:Grímsvötn]]
[[sr:Гримсветн]]
[[fi:Grímsvötn]]
[[sv:Grímsvötn]]
[[uk:Грімсвотн]]

Latest revision as of 13:43, 22 December 2024

Grímsvötn
Grímsvötn and the Vatnajökull glacier, Iceland, July 1972
Highest point
Elevation1,725 m (5,659 ft)[1]
ListingList of volcanoes in Iceland
Coordinates64°25′12″N 17°19′48″W / 64.42000°N 17.33000°W / 64.42000; -17.33000
Geography
Map
Geological features near the Grímsvötn central volcano and its fissure swarm (red outlines). The fissure swarm's recent surface lava flows are shaded violet (darker if more recent, vents violet outline). Other shading shows:    calderas,   central volcanoes and   fissure swarms,   subglacial terrain above 1,100 m (3,600 ft), and   seismically active areas. Clicking on the image enlarges to full window and enables mouse-over with more detail.
Geology
Mountain typeVolcanic caldera
Last eruptionMay 2011

Grímsvötn (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈkrimsˌvœhtn̥] ;[2] vötn = "waters", singular: vatn) is an active volcano with a (partially subglacial) fissure system located in Vatnajökull National Park, Iceland. The central volcano is completely subglacial and located under the northwestern side of the Vatnajökull ice cap. The subglacial caldera is at 64°25′N 17°20′W / 64.417°N 17.333°W / 64.417; -17.333, at an elevation of 1,725 m (5,659 ft). Beneath the caldera is the magma chamber of the Grímsvötn volcano.

Grímsvötn is a basaltic volcano which has the highest eruption frequency of all the volcanoes in Iceland. It has a southwest-northeast-trending fissure system. The massive climate-impacting Laki fissure eruption of 1783–1784 took place in a part of the same Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system.[3] Grímsvötn was erupting at the same time as Laki during 1783, but continued to erupt until 1785. Because most of the volcanic system lies underneath Vatnajökull, most of its eruptions have been subglacial and the interaction of magma and meltwater from the ice causes phreatomagmatic explosive activity.[4] Within the Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system is a second central volcano called Thordarhyrna (Þórðarhyrna).[5]

Jökulhlaup

[edit]

Eruptions in the caldera regularly cause glacial outbursts known as jökulhlaup.[6] Eruptions or geothermal activity, melt enough ice to fill the Grímsvötn caldera with water, and the pressure may be enough to suddenly lift the ice cap, allowing huge quantities of water to escape rapidly. Earthquakes and seismic tremor may occur.[7] Jökulhlaup can occur independent of eruptions or be followed by eruptions.[7] Jökulhlaup independent of eruptions occurred in November, December 2021 and October 2022.[7] Jökulhlaup which were followed by eruptions occurred in 1922, 1934 and 2004.[7] Consequently, the Grímsvötn caldera is monitored very carefully.

When a large eruption occurred in 1996, geologists knew well in advance that a glacial burst was imminent. It did not occur until several weeks after the eruption finished, but monitoring[8] ensured that the Icelandic ring road (Hringvegur) was closed when the burst occurred. A section of road across the Skeiðará sandur was washed away in the ensuing flood, but no one was hurt.

Eruption history between 1990 and today

[edit]

Gjálp 1996

[edit]

(See also the main article: 1996 eruption of Gjálp

The Gjálp fissure vent eruption in 1996 revealed that an interaction may exist between Bárðarbunga and Grímsvötn. A strong earthquake at Bárðarbunga, about magnitude 5, is believed to have been related to the triggering of the eruption in Gjálp.[9] On the other hand, because the magma erupted showed strong connections to the Grímsvötn Volcanic System according to petrology studies, the 1996 as well as a former eruption at Gjálp in the 1930s are thought to have taken place within Grímsvötn Volcanic system.[10][11]

1998 and 2004 eruptions

[edit]
Satellite images of the November 2004 Grímsvötn Eruption. The lower image assigns a false color (red) to the surface ice.

A week-long eruption occurred at Grímsvötn starting on 28 December 1998, but no glacial burst occurred. In November 2004, a week-long eruption occurred. Volcanic ash from the eruption fell as far away as mainland Europe and caused short-term disruption of airline traffic into Iceland, but again no glacial burst followed the eruption.

2011 eruption

[edit]

Harmonic tremors were recorded twice around Grímsvötn on 2 and 3 October 2010, possibly indicating an impending eruption.[12] At the same time, sudden inflation was measured by GPS in the volcano, indicating magma movement under the caldera. On 1 November 2010 meltwater from the Vatnajökull glacier was flowing into a lake, suggesting that an eruption of the underlying volcano could be imminent.

Satellite image from 22 May 2011 of the volcanic plume above Iceland
View of Icelandic landscape beneath the ash-cloud during the 2011 eruption
Grímsvötn in August 2011. Ash covering the surrounding snow and ice

On 21 May 2011 at 19:25 UTC, an eruption began, with 12 km (7 mi) high plumes accompanied by multiple earthquakes,[13][14][15][16] Until 25 May, the eruption scale had been larger than that of the 2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajökull.

The ash cloud from the eruption rose to 20 km (12 mi), and was so far 10 times larger than the 2004 eruption, and the strongest in Grímsvötn in the last 100 years.[17]

Satellite image from 23 May 2011 of the ash-cloud to the south of Iceland

Disruption to air travel in Iceland[18] commenced on 22 May, followed by Greenland, Scotland,[19] Norway, Svalbard[20] and a small part of Denmark on subsequent days. On 24 May the disruption spread to Northern Ireland and to airports in northern England.[18] The cancellation of 900 out of 90,000 European flights[21] in the period 23–25 May was much less widespread than the 2010 disruption after the Eyjafjallajökull eruption.

The eruption stopped at 02:40 UTC on 25 May 2011, although there was some explosive activity from the eruptive vents affecting only the area around the crater.[22][23][24]

2020 onward threats of eruption

[edit]

In June 2020, the Icelandic Meteorological Office (IMO) issued a warning that an eruption might take place in the coming weeks or months, following scientists reporting high levels of sulfur dioxide, which is indicative of the presence of shallow magma. IMO warned that a glacial flood as a result of melting ice could trigger an eruption.[25] No eruption occurred.

In September 2021, an increase in water outflow from under the Vatnajökull ice cap was reported. The water contains elevated levels of dissolved hydrogen sulfide, suggesting increased volcanic activity under the ice.[26] Jökulhlaup (glacial lake flooding) can occur before or after an eruption.

On 4 December 2021, a jökulhlaup occurred from Grímsvötn into the Gígjukvísl river, with an average flow of 2,600 m3/s (92,000 cu ft/s). Two days later, the Icelandic Meteorological Office increased the alert level for Grímsvötn from yellow to orange, after a series of earthquakes was detected. On 7 December, the alert level was lowered back to yellow, after seismic activity decreased and no signs of eruptive activity were detected.[27]

On 11 December 2023, a jökulhlaup followed in time,[7] a Mw4.5 earthquake.[28]

Eruption history before 1990

[edit]

Tephra studies on soil samples from around the Vatnajökull ice-cap, show that the Grímsvötn volcanic system has high activity for Iceland, and had between 4 to 14 explosive eruptions every 100 years (mean about 7 eruptions every 100 years) between 7600 years ago and 870 AD.[29] For technical reasons only the last 10,200 years of explosive eruptions have been characterised locally,[30] and the record gets more inaccurate with time especially prior to 1598, which is first eruption timed to the day.[1] The Laki eruptions which were both effusive and explosive between June 1783 and February 1784,[31] produced the Skaftáreldahraun lava flows, which cover a large part of south-east Iceland.[3] Before this the tip of the Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system was active with the production of the 4550 BCE Botnahraun lava flow which extends beyond the furtherest extent to the south of the Laki lava field.[3] The Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system also formed the Núpahraun lava flows around 4000 BP[31] that extend from the Vatnajökull glacier towards the south east coast and are covered in part by the northern Laki Skaftáreldahraun lava flow.[3] There are two recent pre-historic but undated Bergvatnsárhraun lava flows just on the south-eastern edge of the Vatnajökull glacier, related to the line of the Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissures.[3]

Eruptions Grímsvötn volcanic system last 10,000 years (unconfirmed eruptions not shown)
Standard Date Date Cal BP Lake Lögurinn tephra thickness VEI Comment
2011 - - 4 [1]
2004 - - 3 [1]
1998 - - 3 [1]
1996 - - 3 [1]
1983 - - 2 [1]
1954 - - 1 [1]
1938 12 - 4 [1]
1934 16 - 2 [1]
1933 17 - 1 [1]
1922 28 9 cm (3.5 in) 2 [1],Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
1919 31 - 2 [1]
1910 40 - - [1]
1897 53 - 2 [1]
1891 -41 - 2 [1]
1883 67 - 2 [1]
1873 77 - 4 [1]
1867 83 - 1 [1]
1854 96 - 2 [1]
1838 112 - 2 [1]
1816 134 - 2 [1]
1783 167 - 4 [1] Laki eruption.
1774 176 - 2 [1]
1768 182 - 2 [1]
1753 197 - 2 [1]
1730 220 - 2 [1]
1725 225 - 2 [1]
1716 234 - 2 [1]
1706 244 - 2 [1]
1697 253 - - [1]
1684 266 - 2 [1]
1681 269 - - [1]
1665 285 7 cm (2.8 in) - [1]Approx 280 BP eruption Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
1659 291 - 2 [1]
1638 312 - 2 [1]
1632 318 - - [1]
1629 321 - 2 [1]
1622 328 - - [1]
1619 331 - 2 [1]
1610 340 - - [1]
1603 347 2 cm (0.79 in) - Approx 345 BP eruption - Oct 1603 Lake Lögurinn core[30]
1598 352 - 3 [1]
1530±10 420±10 - - [1]
1521 429 - - [1]
1510 440 - - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
1508 442 8 cm (3.1 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
1500 450 - - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
1500 450 - - [1]
1490±10 460±10 - - [1]
1471 479 - - [1]
1470±10 480±10 - - [1]
1469 481 - - [1]
1450±10 500±10 - - [1]
1430±10 520±10 - - [1]
1390±10 560±10 - - [1]
1370±10 580±10 - - [1]
1369 581 - - [1]
1354 596 - - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[30][1]
1350 600 - - [1]
1341 609 - 2 [1]
1332 618 - 2 [1]
1310±10 640±10 - - [1]
1290±10 660±10 - - [1]
1270±10 680±10 - - [1]
1230±10 720±10 - - [1]
1190 760 - - [1]
1162 788 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[30]
1090 860 - - [1]
1050 900 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[30]
1010 940 - - [1]
977 973 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn core. Has some Veidivötn-Bárdarbunga compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.[30]
885 1065 - - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[30][a]
858 1092 9 cm (3.5 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30][a]
853 1097 3 cm (1.2 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30][a]
852 1098 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[30][a]
850 1100 2 cm (0.79 in) - Lake Lögurinn core. Has also Kverkfjöll, Veidivötn-Bárdarbunga compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.[30][a]
781 1169 2 cm (0.79 in) - Greenland, Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[32][a]
753 1197 - - Greenland core[32]
502 1448 9 cm (3.5 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar cores.[30]
303 1647 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
280 1670 4 cm (1.6 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell, Svartárkort & marine cores.[30]
216 1734 6 cm (2.4 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[30]
183 1767 1 cm (0.39 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-1818±100 BCE 1968±100 3 cm (1.2 in) 2 [1]Lake Lögurinn core. Has some Veidivötn-Bárdarbunga compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned [30]
-589589 BCE 2539 7 cm (2.8 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-800800 BCE 2750 4 cm (1.6 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell & marine cores.[30]
-834834 BCE 2784 9 cm (3.5 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell & marine cores.[30]
-19501950 BCE 3900 - 2 [1]
-24062406 BCE 4356 4 cm (1.6 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30]
-27012701 BCE 4651 1 cm (0.39 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores.[30]
-33433343 BCE 5293 9 cm (3.5 in) - Lake Lögurinn core. Has some Kverkfjöll compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.[30]
-36073607 BCE 5557 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-37113711 BCE 5661 4 cm (1.6 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Snæfell cores.[30]
-37453745 BCE 5695 7 cm (2.8 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Snæfell cores. Has some Veidivötn-Bárdarbunga compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned.[30]
-41174117 BCE 6067 7 cm (2.8 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar, Snæfell & marine cores.[30]
-41874187 BCE 6137 1 cm (0.39 in) - Lake Lögurinn core. Trace possible in a Kárahnjúkar core.[30]
-42764276 BCE 6226 7 cm (2.8 in) - Lake Lögurinn. Possibly in a Kárahnjúkar core.[30]
-43334333 BCE 6283 7 cm (2.8 in) - Lake Lögurinn core. Possibly in a Kárahnjúkar core.[30]
-43384338 BCE 6288 2 cm (0.79 in) - Lake Lögurinn. Trace possible in a Kárahnjúkar core.[30]
-46744674 BCE 6624 - - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30]
-47384738 BCE 6688 8 cm (3.1 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30]
-48494849 BCE 6799 7 cm (2.8 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30]
-50735073 BCE 7023 6 cm (2.4 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Kárahnjúkar & Svartárkort cores.[30]
-57585758 BCE 7708 3 cm (1.2 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30]
-58305830 BCE 7780 - - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-58895889 BCE 7839 2 cm (0.79 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Kárahnjúkar cores.[30]
-62265889 BCE 8176 1 cm (0.39 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-66926692 BCE 8642 6 cm (2.4 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-66956695 BCE 8645 9 cm (3.5 in) - Lake Lögurinn core a possibly in Svartárkort core.[30]
-67166716 BCE 8666 2 cm (0.79 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-68766876 BCE 8826 2 cm (0.79 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-71087108 BCE 9058 9 cm (3.5 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-71367136 BCE 9086 8 cm (3.1 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-71627162 BCE 9112 6 cm (2.4 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-71717171 BCE 9121 6 cm (2.4 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Svartárkort cores.[30]
-71807180 BCE 9130 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Svartárkort cores[30]
-72347234 BCE 9184 3 cm (1.2 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-73187318 BCE 9268 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-73947394 BCE 9344 3 cm (1.2 in) - Has some Veidivötn-Bárdarbunga compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned. Lake Lögurinn & Snæfell cores[30]
-74837483 BCE 9433 8 cm (3.1 in) - Lake Lögurinn core. Possibly in Snæfell core.[30] Tholeiite basalt G9410 tephra in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9410 ± 340 BP.[34]
-75367536 BCE 9486 4 cm (1.6 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-75777577 BCE 9527 8 cm (3.1 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-75857585 BCE 9535 6 cm (2.4 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30]
-77037703 BCE 9653 2 cm (0.79 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30] Tholeiite basalt tephra G9630 in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9630 ± 350 BP.[34] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b]
-78267826 BCE 9776 2 cm (0.79 in) - Lake Lögurinn & Svartárkort cores[30] Tholeiite basalt tephra G9740 in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9740 ± 320 BP.[34] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b]
-78997899 BCE 9849 - - Lake Lögurinn & Kirkjugardur cores.[30] Tholeiite basalt tephra G9850 in Torfdalsvatn core dated at 9850 ± 300 BP.[34] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b]
-79197919 BCE 9869 1 cm (0.39 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Svartárkort & Kirkjugardur cores.[30] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b]
-80538053 BCE 10003 6 cm (2.4 in) - Lake Lögurinn core.[30] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b]
-80698069 BCE 10019 5 cm (2.0 in) - Lake Lögurinn, Svartárkort & Kirkjugardur cores.[30] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b]
-82488248 BCE 10198 - - Lake Lögurinn, Kirkjugardur cores.[30] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b] Tholeiite basalt tephra in at least one of seven layers in Torfdalsvatn core.[34]
-82508250 BCE 10200 - 6 [1]Also has some Borrobol tephra like compositional characteristics - may be mixed eruption or mis–assigned. Lake Lögurinn, Svartárkort, Litligardur & Reitsvík cores and may be the Fosen tephra identified of same age in Fosen, Norway[30] Tholeiite basalt tephra in several of seven layers in Torfdalsvatn core.[34] May be part of G10ka series tephra which covers a 500 year period.[b]

Bacteria in the subglacial lakes

[edit]

In 2004, a community of bacteria was detected in water of the Grímsvötn lake under the glacier, the first time that bacteria have been found in a subglacial lake. The lakes never freeze because of the volcanic heat. The bacteria can also survive at low concentrations of oxygen. The site is a possible analogue for life on the planet Mars, because there are also traces of volcanism and glaciers on Mars and thus the findings could help identify how to look for life on Mars.[36][37]

Geology

[edit]

There is the potential for mechanical interaction such as dyke propagation between Grímsvötn and Thordarhyrna.[38] Interactions can also occur with the nearby Bárðarbunga volcano, which is part of a separate volcanic system.[38] The volcano erupts predominantly tholeiitic basalt,[3] and a close chemical affinity exists with the other lavas of the Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system.[39] The compositional separation from nearby systems has been studied in some detail, and is used to assign lava and tephra deposits to the volcanic system.[31][30] Some of the tephra's erupted have transpired to have mixed compositions with nearby volcanic systems and it is not known if this is due to dual eruptions or intusions crossing magma reserviors.[30] The volcanic system is part of the Eastern volcanic zone of Iceland, and is directly over the Iceland mantle plume.[40] The volcanic system has crater rows extending to the south east; the 25 km (16 mi) long Laki–Grímsvötn fissure system and the 30 km (19 mi) long Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system.[39][3][5] The Rauðhólar-Eldgígur fissure system has been related by some authors to an alignment with the Thordarhyrna central volcano with the Laki–Grímsvötn more in alignment with the Grímsvötn central volcano.[31] Eruptives from Grímsvötn and Thordarhyrna are able to be geochemically distinguished between, so it is possible that the two central volcanoes are not one system.[41] Thordarhyrna has rhyolite formations which have not been found at Grímsvötn.[42]

[edit]

Studies indicate that volcanic activity in Iceland rises and falls so that the frequency and size of eruptions in and around the Vatnajökull ice cap varies with time. It is believed that the four eruptions between 1996 and 2011 could mark the beginning of an active period, during which an eruption in Grímsvötn in Vatnajökull may be expected every 2–7 years. Parallel volcanic activity in nearby Bárðarbunga is known to be associated with increased activity in Grímsvötn. Seismic activity has been increasing in the area in recent years, indicating the entry of magma.[43]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Timings published before 2017 for eruptions between around 700 to 900 are likely inaccurate but need a source to update. Accordingly where the tephra layer is in publications based on Greenland ice core studies since then, dates have been adjusted.[32] Unadjusted timings based on Gudmundsdóttir et al 2016 could be inaccurate.[30]Literature timings were adjusted after the Icelandic tree ring series was extended to 822.[33]
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h The precise relationships with the G10ka series tephra from Grímsvötn aged between 10.4 to 9.9 ka BP which includes the Faroes Saksunarvatn Ash and appears to have at least 5 and up to 7 deposits is unclear as full correlation across all the potentially relevant tephra records in for example Iceland has not yet been undertaken. It is suspected that more than 20 eruptions of Grímsvötn took place in the G10ka time period.[35] This note accordingly applies to all tephra layers potentially dated to within this age range.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp "Grímsvötn". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 27 April 2024.
  2. ^ "How to pronounce /grímsvötn/". youtube.com. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Guðmundsson, Magnús T.; Larsen, Guðrún (2019). "Grímsvötn Alternative name: Grímsvötn-Laki". Retrieved 31 March 2024.
  4. ^ Jude-Eton, T. C.; Thordarson, T.; Gudmundsson, M. T.; Oddsson, B. (2012-03-08). "Dynamics, stratigraphy and proximal dispersal of supraglacial tephra during the ice-confined 2004 eruption at Grímsvötn Volcano, Iceland". Bulletin of Volcanology. 74 (5): 1057–1082. Bibcode:2012BVol...74.1057J. doi:10.1007/s00445-012-0583-3. ISSN 0258-8900. S2CID 128678427.
  5. ^ a b Guðmundsson, Magnús T.; Larsen, Guðrún (2019). "Þórðarhyrna central volcano (Grímsvötn-Laki volcanic system) e: Thordarhyrna". Retrieved 31 March 2024.
  6. ^ Andrew, R. E. B. (2008). PhD Dissertation: Volcanotectonic Evolution and Characteristic Volcanism of the Neovolcanic Zone of Iceland (PDF) (Thesis). Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen. pp. 1–122. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2011-05-24. : pages 38,39, Jökulhlaup figure 8.1 
  7. ^ a b c d e "Flood tremor gradually increasing". 12 January 2023. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  8. ^ Russell, Andrew J.; Gregory, Andrew R.; Large, Andrew R. G.; Fleisher, P. Jay; Harris, Timothy D. (2007). "Tunnel channel formation during the November 1996 jökulhlaup, Skeiðarárjökull, Iceland". Annals of Glaciology. 45 (1): 95–103. Bibcode:2007AnGla..45...95R. doi:10.3189/172756407782282552.
  9. ^ Konstantinou, K.I.; Utami, I.W.; Giannopoulos, D; Sokos, E. (2019). "A reappraisal of seismicity recorded during the 1996 Gjálp eruption, Iceland, in light of the 2014–2015 Bárðarbunga–Holuhraun lateral dike intrusion". Pure and Applied Geophysics. 177 (6): 2579–2595. Bibcode:2019PApGe.177.2579K. doi:10.1007/s00024-019-02387-x.
  10. ^ See eg.: Elín Margrét Magnúsdóttir: Gjóska úr Grímsvötnum 2011 og Bárðarbungu 2014-2015 : Ásýndar- ogkornastærðargreining. BS ritgerð. Jarðvísindadeild Háskóli Íslands (2017) (in Icelandic, abstract also in English) Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  11. ^ See also: Anne Schöpa: Subglacial volcanism with examples from Iceland. TU Freiberg. (2008) Archived 2017-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "Possible Harmonic tremor pulse at Grímsfjall volcano | Iceland Volcano and Earthquake blog". Jonfr.com. 2010-10-02. Archived from the original on 2010-10-10. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  13. ^ Eldgos í Grímsvötnum Archived 2011-08-03 at the National and University Library of Iceland, 24 May 2011 (in Icelandic)
  14. ^ Njörður Helgason (14 April 2011). "Vegurinn um Skeiðarársand lokaður". mbl.is. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  15. ^ "Iceland's most active volcano erupts – Europe". Al Jazeera English. 21 May 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  16. ^ "Iceland volcanic eruption 'not linked to the end of the world' | IceNews – Daily News". Icenews.is. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  17. ^ "Largest Volcanic Eruption in Grímsvötn in 100 Years". Daily News. Iceland Review Online. 22 May 2011. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  18. ^ a b Eurocontrol news
  19. ^ Scottish flights grounded by Iceland volcanic ash cloud, BBC, 23 May 2011
  20. ^ Iceland eruption hits Norwegian flights, The Foreigner, 23 May 2011
  21. ^ David Learmount (26 May 2011). "European proceedures (sic) cope with new ash cloud". Flightglobal. Archived from the original on July 3, 2015. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
  22. ^ "Volcanic Ash Advisory at 1241 on 25 May 2011". Met Office UK. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
  23. ^ "Iceland volcano ash: German air traffic resuming". BBC News. 25 May 2011. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
  24. ^ "Update on volcanic activity in Grímsvötn". Iceland Met Office. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  25. ^ "Evidences that Grímsvötn volcano is getting ready for the next eruption | News". Icelandic Meteorological office. Retrieved 2020-08-05.
  26. ^ "Grimsvötn volcano (Iceland): subglacial meltwater flood in progress". Volcano Discovery. 3 September 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  27. ^ "IWO:Flood in Grímsvötn". 8 December 2021. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  28. ^ "UGS:M 4.5 - 109 km W of Höfn, Iceland". Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  29. ^ Óladóttir, B.A.; Larsen, G.; Sigmarsson, O. (2011). "Holocene volcanic activity at Grímsvötn, Bárdarbunga and Kverkfjöll subglacial centres beneath Vatnajökull, Iceland". Bulletin of Volcanology. 73 (9): 1187–1208. Bibcode:2011BVol...73.1187O. doi:10.1007/s00445-011-0461-4.: 1187 
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs Gudmundsdóttir, E.R.; Larsen, G.; Björck, S.; Ingólfsson, Ó; Striberger, J. (2016). "A new high-resolution Holocene tephra stratigraphy in eastern Iceland: Improving the Icelandic and North Atlantic tephrochronology". Quaternary Science Reviews. 150: 234–249. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.08.011.: Table 4 
  31. ^ a b c d Bindeman, I.; Gurenko, A.; Sigmarsson, O.; Chaussidon, M. (2008). "Oxygen isotope heterogeneity and disequilibria of olivine crystals in large volume Holocene basalts from Iceland: evidence for magmatic digestion and erosion of Pleistocene hyaloclastites". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 72 (17): 4397–4420. Bibcode:2008GeCoA..72.4397B. doi:10.1016/j.gca.2008.06.010.
  32. ^ a b c Gabriel, I.; Plunkett, G.; Abbott, P.M.; Behrens, M.; Burke, A.; Chellman, N.; Cook, E.; Fleitmann, D.; Hörhold, M.; Hutchison, W.; McConnell, J.R. (2024). "Decadal-to-centennial increases of volcanic aerosols from Iceland challenge the concept of a Medieval Quiet Period". Communications Earth & Environment. 5 (1): 194. Bibcode:2024ComEE...5..194G. doi:10.1038/s43247-024-01350-6.
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