The (ash) history of Iceland, in my backyard – Part I

This week I was lucky enough to have a recently dug square hole (10m per 10m, about 2 meter deep) some 200 meters from my house in Southwest Iceland.

Needless to say I spend the past bright summer evenings of Iceland inside this hole, which has nothing else but dirt and rocks. To us, volcano lovers, having such a hole in a volcanic land is like finding a mine of gold!

The soil shows many layers of colored material, which is nothing but the ash that has fallen from the many eruptions that happened in Icelandic history. This is a science called tephrachronology and it became my newest hobby.

Photograph and copyright belonging to Irpsit, used on explicit permission by Volcano Café. An excavation near home. And I stayed until late night to look at its strange layers.

When an eruption happens (if it’s the explosive type) the ash usually drifts according to local winds. In Iceland, the wind can blow from every direction depending on the kind of weather. This results in ash being deposited in a space-specific way for every different eruption.

A large eruption such as Askja in 1875 (VEI5) blew almost entirely to the northeast (so since I live to the southwest, I cannot find any Askja ash). In practice this means that the absense of a famous eruption does not mean it did not happen, just that the ash blew somewhere else. Likewise, a smaller eruption can deposit plentiful ash if the same wind keeps blowing in one direction (example of Eyjafjallajökull blowing southwards towards Europe in 2010).

In one single spot, the ash from different volcanoes accumulates over time, giving a profile of layers, that correspond to a time orderly of eruptions of different volcanoes. Usually, famous eruptions such Vatnaöldur in 870 (when the settlers arrived) can be used as markers for less known eruptions. The identity of a volcano can be roughly identified by looking at its color. We know that few volcanoes in Iceland produce white tephra, only Hekla and the rarer eruptions of Öræfajökull and Askja. Grimsvötn often produces brown ash, while Katla or Eyjafjallajökull black ash.

But enough of introductions! Let’s go for the real thing.

Photograph and copyright belonging to Irpsit, used on explicit permission by Volcano Café. The history of many eruptions is recurded as different ash layers.

The walls from the hole reveal, at instant glansing, two bright WHITE layers (figure 1). At close inspection, the upper white layer (at 25cm) is actually a double of two light colored layers, while the lower at (49 cm) is a single thick layer. Obviously these layers seem to come from Hekla.

The Hekla 3 white layer
To confirm whether or not these are from Hekla, there is a scientific paper of a soil profile done very near to where I live, around Grimsnes volcano (just 5km from where I live). They found only one large white layer at 50cm which corresponds to the largest eruption of Hekla during Holocene, the Hekla 3 eruption (a VEI5+) of 1000 BC. This is probably our second and largest layer.

Picture taken from Wikimedia Commons. Hekla is the source of much white ash in Iceland (as observe from the deposits on its flanks).

So, imagine, an eruption that deposited a layer of about 4cm thick ash here. That is pretty astonishing considering that a normal Hekla eruption barely deposits ash here (I am about 50km from it). This euption resulted in a 18 year climate change in Europe, observed in tree rings. It should have been one big huge eruption.

Now, if we look at the top white double layer, that is surrounded up and down by two thick DARK bands. These are actually a pinkish brown. Both are about 3cm thick ash (impressive too), the lower band is especially large at some spots.
The two dark Bardarbunga ash bands
According to other studies (and to Inge B), and also my conclusion, these are both the Veidivotn ash (1477) and the Vatnaöldur ash (870 AC), known as Settlement Ash (because it happen around the arrival of the vikings to Iceland). At least the Vatnaöldur ash is widepread reported everywhere in Southwest Iceland. Furthermore both have orange colored deposits underneath (actually light pink in Veidivotn ash, and bright orange in Vatnaöldur ash) which is expected. Both eruptions started with rhyolite ash from Torfajokull followed by the greyish/brown color of Bardarbunga fissures. The Torfajokull ash in 1477 was erupted from Brennisteinsalda, which is a mountain very colorful but mostly pink and orange.

Brennisteinsalda is the volcanic cone that erupted some colorfull rhyolite in 1477 (within Torfajökull).

The “double” white band of Hekla 1104 and 1341
If these are correct (I don’t confirm they are), then there are 2 white tephra eruptions in between. It’s easy to ascribe one to Hekla in 1104 (the largest eruption of Hekla since settlement (and second largest of all volcanoes), a very destructive one, but the ash during that one, was reported to go mostly northwards). The other one could either be the eruptions of Hekla in 1300 or 1341 (both with heavy ash) or less likely the 1362 eruption of Öræfajökull, which was the largest eruption of all, since settlement! Yes, larger (in tephra and intensity) than all Katla eruptions, Laki, Veidivotn, Askja or Hekla. Few of you know that Öræfajökull is a mamoth volcano, the largest in Iceland (and tallest).

However, I do think that this more recent white layer, was most likely the 1341 eruption. In 1300 the ash blew mostly northwards resulting in a famine, but in 1341 it blew westwards, and quite far away (towards Akranes). In 1362, the ash of Öræfajökull blew mostly to the southeast, opposite of where I am (and I know little ash felt to the west, in Vík – information from Skaftafell national park).

There is so much I write in a second part. All the minor layers in between (that you only see in close-ups) and all the broad bands below Hekla 3. Until then, let’s us discuss what we have so far.

IRPSIT

Askja – A brief update

Photograph by Herve 1993. In the foreground is Viti, in the background is Öskjuvatn.

After an initial spatter of information of the de-icing of Lake Öskjuvatn things are now coming to a full Easter stop.

After going through the records for earthquakes during the winter up until now one can easily see that there has not been any elevated level of earthquakes. Regarding harmonic tremor episodes, yes there have been a few short episodes that can be interpreted as such, but not a lot really. Also the GPS readings have been fairly consistent.

Image by IMO. The earthquake showing is in the Upptyppingar, and is considered to not be a part of the Askja swarm. It is an uncorrected 1.5M.

In reality there are not that many signs of an upcoming eruption. First of all Askja deflated from the onset of the Krafla eruption up until 2007 when an inflation started according to gravimetric readings. Together with GPS readings an inflation was spotted in the center of the old caldera, and a likely dyke intrusion trending towards (possible all the way into) Herdubreid volcano.

That inflation started a series of earthquake swarms, predominantly in the Herdubreid volcano. But, during the winter there seem to not have been a lot of activity, and this makes the de-icing of Öskjuvatn a bit surprising to say the least.

Most likely one of the quakes gave water a path down to a heated area closer to the magma or down to remnants from the 1875 eruption. This in turn most likely caused a new sub-surface geothermal source to heat up the lake. All we can say is that the amount of energy released into the water is substantial, and that it has been warming the lake rapidly during the last few weeks.

Askja erupting?

Image by IMO. The plot is showing fairly normal readings for this rather noisy SIL-station.

Currently there is not much pointing towards an eruption. There are no persistant earthquakes, there is no elevated tremor level, and there is no rapid movement in the GPS:s in the vicinity. The last thing should be taken with a large pinch of salt. The GPS:s of Iceland are really hard to interpret. More about the GPS:s and how to read them will be coming I hope in an upcoming post from someone who actually knows what she is talking about.

In conclusion

Anybody hoping for an Easter-eruption to cure their boredom should go and start painting eggs instead.  We will know when and if a final run-up phase starts, and then it is most likely weeks before the actual eruption starts. So, do not expect Askja to blow anytime soon. Otherwise all we can do is waiting, for Askja in general, and for the IMO report after their Tuesday visit.

CARL

Krafla – Iceland’s divorce volcano

Photograph by Michael Ryan, USGS. Picture showing the 1984 eruption.

When I was a child I grew up with Krafla. Not so odd perhaps since it erupted for nine years. In my childhood mind it seemed like Krafla divided Iceland in two parts, and I dreamt up weird bridges spanning the fire fountains that in my dreams spanned the entire length of the island. Come to think about it, no wonder I became both a volcanoholic and Icelandophiliac when I grew up.

Kraflas diverse mechanics

Krafla is considered to be a caldera volcano, and a complicated one to boot. It is actually a double caldera volcano where the outer caldera is visible, and the inner one is filled up with lava-fields. The calderas are in turn dissected in a north-south direction by the Eastern Icelandic Rifting Zone and in the east-west direction by a transverse Graben. On top of that there is a northern fissure zone extending out to the ocean, and a southern extending to Lake Mývatn. So, it is quite easy to discuss activity as being in one of the quarters of Krafla. The latest eruption was in the northwest quarter.

Photograph by Michael Ryan, USGS. Picture is showing what might be the closest resemblance to what Mordor looked like... 1984 eruption.

 

Already one starts to understand that this is a very odd volcano. It is actually rather hard to say what type of volcano it is. It is a rifting fissure volcano, but with a magma chamber that is large enough to actually be able to building up enough to collapse. It can have central caldera eruptions like the latest, and it can also have fissure eruptions. It is also able to have crater and cone formative eruptions, as it did 1300 when it had a crater eruption south of Viti.

Krafla normally erupts alternating to the north or south of the transverse Graben. Of course this does not go like a pendulum, but in general it never erupts both to the north and the south. The transverse Graben also has the effect that any tremoring in the north half will only show up on the north SIL-station, and activity in the South will show on the south SIL only. In this capacity the Graben functions as an imperfect sound-shield.

Photograph by Michael Ryan, USGS. Even though the scale of the lavaflood is immense, we should remember that this is a very small rifting eruption. Please notice the researchers up in the front to get the scale. Eruption of 1984.

Normally Krafla has rather unexplosive eruptions, but there have been a couple of confirmed VEI-4 eruptions, and the Viti formation was probably a bit messy. Another feature of Krafla is that it normally erupts in intervals that are loosely based around 230 year cycles. This is associated with increases in the rifting in the North Icelandic Rift Zone. Sometimes it seems to jump over 1 or more of the rift cycles, and sometimes it seems to disregard the rifting totally.

According to IMO Krafla will not erupt again during this current cycle of high rifting in Iceland. There is a bit of a debate if the current cycle started with the 1960 eruption of Askja, or with the eruptive sequence of Krafla. Be that as it may, we are definitely closing in on the high-point of the current rifting cycle.

Kraflas latest eruption

The rifting of Iceland goes in intervals where the rifting is sometimes slower than the annual average 2.5cm, and sometimes faster, even up to 5cm annually. But on average it rifts at that speed. These episodes of high rifting normally correspond to Kraflas eruptive cycles.

Photograph by Gudmundar Sigvaldason, Nordic Volcanological Institute. Anybody up for lava hoolahoops? Eruption of 1980.

1975 Krafla started her latest eruptive cycle, up until 1984 she had no less than 6 eruptions. The eruptive fissures started to the west and ran in roughly north/south direction, and then each new fissure eruption moved towards the north and east. Each new fissure generally erupted more material than the previous.

The site of the eruptions was trending from Leihrnjúkur to the north. There is still activity at Leihrnjúkur with intermittent small earthquake swarms and occasional harmonic tremoring. So the area is in no way really dormant. Leihrnjúkur is situated roughly 1.6 kilometers NNW of the Krafla Geothermal Power plant which was being constructed during the initial eruption. One can easily understand that they were a bit nervous about that back then. Especially when a likely fissure opened close to the bottom of one of the boreholes and fire started to sprout forth out of the tube sticking up out of the ground. This was probably the first and only manmade volcanic vent in history.

Today there is a very low probability of Krafla erupting, even though one should never say never about any Icelandic volcano. Remember the earthquake swarms, and the occasional little spasm of harmonic tremor in the northwest quarter.

Krafla Inflation

During the Krafla eruption something odd was noticed, and that is that Askja deflated prior to the eruption of Krafla. This deflation of Askja continued up until just a few years ago, and when Askja started to inflate, Krafla in turn started to deflate. There is probably no direct magmatic link in between them. But there might be a deeper relationship at the feeder level down at the MOHO.

Photograph from the 1980 eruption by Gudmundar Sigvaldason, Nordic Volcanological Institute. The image as lava is falling as a waterfall into one of its own fissures makes one wonder... Does volcanoes regurgitate and ruminate upon their own lava?

A fun fact is that during the eruption the IMO used one of the simplest tools to measure a volcano ever deployed. They used a water filled device to measure how the water level was rising and sinking at the ends. By using what is in practice a very long aquarium they got a very good inclinometer showing how the angle of the volcano shifted. A lot of data was gleaned through this very simple device. Never ever short sell simple things; they are often giving the best and most reliable data. Well, as long as you remember to pour in new water from time to time.

Ah… The title. I should perhaps explain that. I am of course talking about the divorce between the American plate and the Eurasian plate. As the plates move apart, the poor child of Krafla gets cranky.

CARL