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Langjökull volcano

Stratovolcano volcano (subglacial) 1360 m (4,462 ft)
Iceland, 64.75°N / -19.98°W
Current status: dormant (1 out of 5)
Stilin tipik shpërthim: Large effusive eruptions from  flank fissures, explosive activity from the summit crater.
Langjökull shpërthimet vullkan: ca. 925 AD
Tërmetet e fundit në afërsi:
KohëMag. / ThellësiDistancëVend
Fri, 10 May
Fri, 10 May 23:29 UTCM 1.2 / 6.2 km24 km23.2 km NNE of Geysir
Thu, 25 Apr
Thu, 25 Apr 13:21 UTCM 1.2 / 5.6 km23 km24.1 km NNE of Geysir
Wed, 24 Apr
Wed, 24 Apr 20:00 UTCM 2.2 / 4.1 km23 km23.9 km NNE of Geysir
Wed, 24 Apr 20:00 UTCM 1.9 / 6 km23 km24.1 km NNE of Geysir
Wed, 24 Apr 16:47 UTCM 1.2 / 5 km24 km24.3 km NNE of Geysir
View all recent quakes
The Langjökull central volcano lies at the northern end of an active volcanic zone that extends to the NE from the Reykjanes Peninsula.

Background:

Langjökull volcano occupies the NE half of the massive Langjökull icecap, east of the prominent Pleistocene table mountain, Erikskökull. A summit caldera lies beneath the ice. Several shield volcanoes have been constructed along flank fissure zones, and postglacial lava flows flank Langjökull on the northern, western, and eastern sides. One of the most prominent of these is a small shield volcano that was formed at the site of the massive Hallmundahraun lava flow, which covers 200 sq km, and was erupted shortly after 900 AD.
The Geysir thermal area, containing Iceland's largest geysers, lies in the Haukadalur basin, near the southern end of the lengthy fissure system extending from Langjökull central volcano.
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Source: GVP, Smithsonian Institute



Background

The Langjökull central volcano lies at the northern end of an active volcanic zone that extends to the NE from the Reykjanes Peninsula.
Langjökull volcano occupies the NE half of the massive Langjökull icecap, east of the prominent Pleistocene table mountain, Erikskökull. A summit caldera lies beneath the ice. Several shield volcanoes have been constructed along flank fissure zones, and postglacial lava flows flank Langjökull on the northern, western, and eastern sides. One of the most prominent of these is a small shield volcano that was formed at the site of the massive Hallmundahraun lava flow, which covers 200 sq km, and was erupted shortly after 900 AD.
The Geysir thermal area, containing Iceland's largest geysers, lies in the Haukadalur basin, near the southern end of the lengthy fissure system extending from Langjökull central volcano.


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Source: GVP, Smithsonian Institute



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