Fagradalsfjall volcano, Iceland

Lava from 2021 Icelandic eruption gives rare view of deep churnings beneath volcano

16 September 2022

After centuries without volcanic activity, Iceland’s Reykjanes peninsula sprang to life in 2021 when lava erupted from the Fagradalsfjall volcano. New research involving the ̽»¨Ö±²¥ of Cambridge helps us see what is going on deep beneath the volcano by reading the chemistry of lavas and volcanic gases almost as they were erupted.

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Kīlauea eruption, 2018

Size matters: if you are a bubble of volcanic gas

06 August 2018

̽»¨Ö±²¥chemical composition of gases emitted from volcanoes – which are used to monitor changes in volcanic activity – can change depending on the size of gas bubbles rising to the surface, and relate to the way in which they erupt. ̽»¨Ö±²¥, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, could be used to improve the forecasting of threats posed by certain volcanoes. 

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Luck and lava

06 October 2014

A team of researchers from Cambridge’s Department of Earth Sciences have recently returned from Iceland where, thanks to a bit of luck, they have gathered the most extensive dataset ever from a volcanic eruption, which will likely yield considerable new insights into how molten rock moves underground, and whether or not it erupts.

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