Impressum | abbonnieren News beitragen || Français | English
Übersetzung bearbeiten

Ljósufjöll Vulkan

Fissure vents 988 m / 3,241 ft
Iceland, 64.86°N / -22.2°W
Aktueller Status: nicht aktiv (1 von 5)
Typische Aktivität: Effusive fissure eruptions (lava flows)
Ausbrüche des Ljósufjöll: 960 AD +-10 years

Beschreibung:

The Ljósufjöll volcanic system at the eastern end of the Snaefellsnes Peninsula is a group of basaltic cinder cones and lava flows along short fissures on a roughly 90-km-long WNW-ESE line.

The volcanic field is about 20-km wide at the eastern end and narrows to about 10-km width on the west. Young-looking cinder cones and lava flows with morphologically fresh surfaces testify to numerous eruptions during the past 10,000 years. The latest eruption post-dated the settlement of Iceland, and took place about 1000 years ago.

---
Source: GVP, Smithsonian Institute



Background


The Ljósufjöll volcanic system at the eastern end of the Snaefellsnes Peninsula is a group of basaltic cinder cones and lava flows along short fissures on a roughly 90-km-long WNW-ESE line.

The volcanic field is about 20-km wide at the eastern end and narrows to about 10-km width on the west. Young-looking cinder cones and lava flows with morphologically fresh surfaces testify to numerous eruptions during the past 10,000 years. The latest eruption post-dated the settlement of Iceland, and took place about 1000 years ago.
---
Source: GVP, Smithsonian Institute