January
2015 – SKAFTAFELL, Iceland — Just north of here, on the far side of the
impenetrable Vatnajokull ice sheet, lava is spewing from a crack in the
earth on the flanks of Bardarbunga, one of Iceland’s largest volcanoes.
By volcanologists’ standards, it is a peaceful eruption, the lava
merely spreading across the landscape as gases bubble out of it. For
now, those gases — especially sulfur dioxide, which can cause
respiratory and other problems — are the main concern, prompting health
advisories in the capital, Reykjavik, 150 miles to the west, and
elsewhere around the country. But sometime soon, the top of Bardarbunga,
which lies under as much as half a mile of ice, may erupt explosively.
That could send plumes of gritty ash into the sky that could shut down
air travel across Europe because of the damage the ash can do to jet
engines. And it could unleash a torrent
of glacial meltwater that could wipe out the only road connecting
southern Iceland to the capital. All of that could happen. Then again,
it may not.
Such are the mysteries of volcanoes that more than four months after
Bardarbunga began erupting, scientists here are still debating what
will happen next. The truth is, no one really knows. Volcanic eruptions
are among the Earth’s most cataclysmic events, and understanding how and
when they happen can be crucial to saving lives and reducing damage to
infrastructure and other property. Scientists have several powerful
tools to help, but in the end, they are often reduced to analyzing
possibilities within possibilities, chains of potential events that
could unfold in multiple ways. “Volcanoes are really difficult to
predict because they are so nonlinear,” said Pall Einarsson, a geophysicist
at the University of Iceland. “They can suddenly decide to do something
very different.” For now, the eruption remains what volcanologists call
an effusive one — the lava, consisting primarily of molten basalt, is
thin enough that the gases bubble out with little explosive force.
And the amounts of sulfur dioxide and other gases, while a concern
locally, are nowhere near the amounts produced by an eruption at a
fissure called Laki in the 1780s. In that event, the gases poisoned
livestock across Iceland, leading to a famine that killed about a
quarter of the country’s population and had other effects in Europe and
elsewhere. One possibility is that the current eruption will eventually
peter out as the source of magma is depleted. “Maybe the most likely
scenario is something similar to what we’ve been seeing,” Sigmundsson
said. But that could take a while; although the volume of lava has
declined, it has done so only very gradually, he said, suggesting the
eruption could continue for many months. But there are many other
possibilities. Bardarbunga sits at the heart of a complex system of
volcanoes and “has a history of affecting its neighbors,” Einarsson
said. Were the dike to continue moving to the northeast, he said, it
could set off an eruption at the nearby Askja volcano, although that
seems less likely.
Of greater concern is what is happening at Bardarbunga’s caldera,
the wide, deep valley at the top of the mountain that is filled with
hardened magma from past eruptive activity. Earthquake data and GPS
measurements show that this hardened magma, which acts like a plug, is
sinking, probably as the hot magma below it escapes through the fissure
to the north. The subsidence is astonishingly rapid, about a foot a day,
and the question is how much more of this the plug can take before it
breaks up. “As of now, the system seems to be relatively stable,”
Einarsson said. “But it’s almost certain that this can’t last very long,
and that’s what people are worried about. Because this plug is bound to
disintegrate as it moves so much.” If the plug cracks apart, the hot
magma below would have a new, easier path to the surface — straight up —
where it would combine with ice to cause a steam-magma explosion. Such
an eruption could create a large plume of ash that could disrupt air
travel, as the eruption at another Icelandic volcano did in 2010. Its
effects on the surrounding region could be catastrophic as well, with
glacial meltwater collecting in the caldera until it overflows, causing a
vast flood.
That has happened countless times in Iceland’s geological history,
and it is what created the eerie skeidararsandur, the vast delta west of
Skaftafell that resembles the surface of the moon, as floodwaters
brought huge quantities of black volcanic sand down from the mountains.
The skeidararsandur could take the brunt of a flood again, although it
would depend on precisely where the eruption occurred. A short distance
this way or that, and the floodwaters might flow to the north, or even
to the west — an especially troubling possibility given that several
hydroelectric dams responsible for much of Iceland’s electricity could
be damaged or destroyed. “One can never be absolutely certain about
predicting,” Einarsson said. “So we have to line up all the possible
scenarios and stretch our imaginations to figure out what could possibly
happen.” –Alaskan Dispatch
Sunday, January 11, 2015
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment