Iceland's volcano eruptions may last decades
Date: June 26, 2024
The eruptions on the Reykjanes Peninsula have forced authorities to declare a state of
emergency, with a series of eight eruptions having occurred since 2021. This southwestern
region is home to 70 percent of the country's population, its only international airport, and
several geothermal power plants that supply hot water and electricity. The most recent eruption
in May through June triggered the evacuation of residents and visitors of the Blue Lagoon
geothermal spa, a popular tourist attraction, for the third time in more than two months.
Although Iceland sees regular eruptions because it sits above a volcanic hot spot, the Reykjanes
Peninsula has been dormant for 800 years. Its last volcanic era continued over centuries
however, prompting scientists to predict the renewed volcanism to be the start of a long
episode.
Under an hour's drive from the island's capital city Reykjavík, the eruptions pose considerable
risks for economic disruption, and they leave evacuated communities uncertain of a possible
return.
An international team of scientists has been watching the volcanoes over the past three years.
Analyzing seismic tomography imaging and the composition of lava samples, they've
uncovered parts of the geological processes behind the new volcanic era. They predict the
region may have to prepare for recurring eruptions lasting years to decades and possibly
centuries.
The researchers report their findings in a paper published June 26 in the journal Terra Nova.
The project included collaborations from the University of Oregon, Uppsala University in
Sweden, University of Iceland, Czech Academy of Sciences and University of California, San
Diego. The work follows an earlier Nature Communications study of the initial Reykjanes
eruptions in 2021.
Almost all of Iceland's island is built from lava, said Ilya Bindeman, a volcanologist and earth
sciences professor at the UO. The country sits on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the tectonic plate
boundary that causes North America and Eurasia to push further apart. The drifting of these
plates can spark volcanic eruptions when hot rock from the earth's mantle -- the middle and
largest layer of the planet -- melts and rises to the surface.
Although scientists know the origin of Reykjanes Peninsula's current eruptions is plate
movement, the kind of magma storage and plumbing systems that feed them are unidentified,
Bindeman said. The peninsula consists of eight volcanically active sites, so understanding
whether there is one shared magma source or multiple independent ones and their depth can
help predict the duration and impact of these eruptions.
Using geochemical and seismic data, the researchers investigated whether the magma of the
initial eruptions from one volcano in the peninsula from 2021 to 2023 came from the same
source as the magma in the recent eruptions of a different volcano to the west.
Bindeman specializes in isotopic analysis, which can help identify the "fingerprint" of magma.
Magma is made of mostly eight elements, including oxygen and hydrogen, and 50 different
trace elements in smaller concentrations and various ratios. The unique combination of trace
elements can help differentiate magma sources from one another. Scientists can also measure
the abundance of isotopes, elements with the same chemical property but different masses, in
the magma. There are three different isotopes of oxygen, for example, Bindeman said.
"In the air we breathe, there's a mixture of these oxygen isotopes and we don't feel the
difference," he said. "Their differences are usually not important for chemical reactions but are
important to recognize as their relative abundances in magma can differentiate one magma
source from another."
Analyzing samples of lava rock from two different volcanoes in the peninsula, their similar
fingerprints implied a shared magma storage zone below the peninsula. Imaging of earth's
interior based on local earthquakes also suggested the existence of a reservoir about 5.5 to 7.5
miles in the earth's crust, the shallowest layer.
However, that storage is ultimately fed by the melting rock deeper in the mantle, which can
cause eruptions that last decades, with hundreds of square miles of magma surfacing,
Bindeman said. Iceland's hotspot also will have no problem fountaining that flow, he said.
Although this marks the beginning of potentially persistent volcanic episodes in Iceland, the
researchers can't precisely predict yet how long the episodes and the gaps between each will
last.
"Nature is never regular," Bindeman said. "We don't know how long and how frequently it
will continue for the next ten or even hundred years. A pattern will emerge, but nature always
has exceptions and irregularities."
Discussions are continuing on plans to safely drill into the volcanic sites to glean insights into
the geological processes driving the eruptions.
Because the volcanic activity is less volatile and explosive than eruptions in other countries, it
provides a rare opportunity for scientists to approach fissures actively erupting lava, Bindeman
said. He called it a "natural laboratory" both astonishing and chilling.
"When you witness a volcanic eruption, you can feel that these are the massive forces of nature,
and you yourself are very small," Bindeman said. "These events are ordinary from the
geological scale, but from the human scale, they can be devastating."