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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • On today’s newscast: after months of quiet, over 200 earthquakes have been recorded around the volcano. Something just might be brewing under there and scientists have their suspicions as to what’s going on. We also bring you an update on the election and the mess with the Northwest constituency. And finally, we discuss what’s happening in La Palma in Spain, and how it reminds us Icelanders of the notorious volcano in Vestmannaeyjar.
    As ever, please don’t forget to like, subscribe and hit the bell notification for the latest updates on the volcano and more from your friends at The Reykjavík Grapevine. Your support means the world to us.
    The next issue of Reykjavík Grapevine is out on October 8! Get it sent to your door by becoming a subscriber. If you sign up this week, you get the chance to win a Volcano Box from our store, and a winner will be randomly picked on Monday. Follow the link below to sign up!
    shop.grapevine...
    And if just want to go ahead and purchase one of our lava boxes (with delicious chocolate modelled by Valur) you can do so here:
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    The volcano newscast is sponsored by Lava Centre: lavacentre.is
    Discover the volcanic eruptions and lava flows that make it a Iceland a geological wonderland. Featuring new material about the Geldingadalir eruption!
    The newscast is sponsored by Einstök Beer:
    einstokbeer.com/

Комментарии • 255

  • @enriqueromero9438
    @enriqueromero9438 3 года назад +4

    Thanks Art, thanks Poli, thanks Valur. Great video.
    All the best to poor people at La Palma loosing houses and jobs at the same time.

  • @SparkieNeisti
    @SparkieNeisti 3 года назад +58

    The tectonic plates' movement are called a divergent boundary, so the plates are moving away from each other :)

    • @DaddysDollxo
      @DaddysDollxo 3 года назад

      Sounds fun until tsunamis happen and people die

    • @SparkieNeisti
      @SparkieNeisti 3 года назад +6

      @@DaddysDollxo Tsunamis are normally caused by earthquakes along underwater convergent plate boundaries.
      I don't believe anywhere in Iceland would build enough pressure to even cause a earthquake large enough anyway.

  • @RookwingsKirk
    @RookwingsKirk 3 года назад +3

    I was wondering about all the small yellow rocks dotted about the surface of the lava... I'm almost sure they didn't fly there, or even roll there, so probably thrown there by humans.
    What a primitive species we still are...

  • @rongaul8169
    @rongaul8169 3 года назад +1

    The problem in La Palma is not with the lava hitting the ocean, but parts of the island, in the north/central portion, that have slumped towards the Atlantic. large landslides have happened previously, causing tsunamis. The current eruption is in the southern half of the island, and does not pose as a trigger for this landslide.
    Landslides are not uncommon to volcanic islands. Hawaii poses this risk as well.
    As the new land settles in the deep ocean, the new crust can break, and slide.
    So, yes La Palma could produce a large tsunami, but not during this eruption.

  • @WorldofLadySondrea
    @WorldofLadySondrea 3 года назад +6

    What is wrong with people. It's still hot and so many people are on it. Are they mental?

    • @deannelson9565
      @deannelson9565 3 года назад +2

      That lava is nearly two months old there's not one damn thing dangerous about walking on it when speaking of hot lava! You can certainly fall and break an ankle or get cut but you're not going to get burnd!

    • @SparkieNeisti
      @SparkieNeisti 3 года назад +2

      @@deannelson9565 You're joking, right?

    • @deannelson9565
      @deannelson9565 3 года назад

      @@SparkieNeisti I have 30 years of experience living next to an active lava field what's your experience level! Yeah that's what I thought

    • @cproteus
      @cproteus 3 года назад +2

      @@SparkieNeisti it’s so ironic how Mr Internet Expert is here calling everyone an internet expert. He’s truly special. At 4:55 you can actually see the red glowing bits just In front of where he is walking.

    • @WorldofLadySondrea
      @WorldofLadySondrea 3 года назад +1

      @@deannelson9565 you can see the steam still coming up from it showing it is still hot, plus if you happen to walk across a lava tube, empty or full, the top can break away and then one will fall. The ground is still not stable enough.

  • @TheMymovie
    @TheMymovie 3 года назад +5

    BBC, ITV, Channel 4 News * I Sleep...
    The Reykjavik Grapevine * I watch immediately!

  • @seismogenic
    @seismogenic 3 года назад +40

    It's not so much that the magma forcing the plates apart, but rather the movement of the plates away from each other is part of what allows the magma to rise! (Though, of course, Iceland is an extra interesting case because there's a superheated plume of rock rising through the mantle directly under the spot where the plates are already moving apart. Unlike anywhere else in the world! I really loved the way the Lava Centre showed this combination of factors!)
    Meanwhile - the volcano in La Palma comes from one of those superheated mantle plumes on its own, with no plate boundary on top.
    (The megatsunami scare was more about a chunk of the island falling into the ocean, not really about fresh lava flows reaching the water. But lots of volcanologists have still debunked that, and I've seen geology Twitter trying to spread the word that the public shouldn't worry about this. I'm glad you're also spreading that word!)

  • @808OnMyMind
    @808OnMyMind 3 года назад +42

    I think Polly likes to dig in the moss because it’s soft and easy to mess up. Such a sweet pup she is. You too, Valur, a matched pair. ❤️🐾

  • @Lessinath
    @Lessinath 3 года назад +22

    Regarding La Palma -
    There are large landslide deposits on the ocean floor around the Azores islands (and other volcanic island chains in some places around the world, like Hawaii too) with a volume of hundreds of cubic kilometers each, and based on how common the large fault scarps where these things would have to break away from are, large landslides from volcanic islands are not a super rare event in geologic history. The good news is geologic history is very long, even compared to the lifespan of entire human civilizations. Not only is it not likely that such an event will happen in any of our lifetimes anywhere in the world, it's unlikely that it will happen even once in the next 50,000 years.
    I have seen and read the paper in question. It is not very long and not super deep. The paper did correctly identify an unstable block of the mountain, posited this could potentially happen because there's good evidence large landslides like this have happened before, and we *know* it is at a minimum not fixed in place because this entire block of the island shifted by several meters in the 1940's during an eruption then. The paper then didn't assign a probability to it or anything they simply said "This block is potentially unsable; here's what would happen if it fell into the ocean." And their analysis of that event is, in fact, correct.
    They are being blamed for fearmongers reading what they said and using it to farm for clicks and views, and saying it is likely or that it WILL happen. The paper says NOTHING about the probability of this event. It's the fearmongers doing that, and this incorrectly attributed blame is deeply unfair to the authors of that paper.
    The largest volcanic landslide in recorded history - the failure of the north flank of Mt St Helens - saw the north flank of the mountain get pushed out tens of meters before it failed. The unstable block there was much smaller than this one. We'd likely see something similar before a landslide off La Palma, only more. Hundreds of meters of displacement would have to happen, and that's simply extremely unlikely with the current conditions of the volcano.
    Looking at the geologic history of past large volcanic landslides, it will take a truly gigantic eruption to push it free. This scale of landslide is the sort of thing that happens once every few hundred thousand years somewhere in the world, so on the scale of a human lifetime it is not a major hazard. Calling it a "one in a million chance" is not a statement I would disagree with. However, "They know nothing" I disagree with just as much as "this will happen tomorrow" because both of those are wildly incorrect. There's no reason to think that this is going to fail imminently, but there isn't just evidence that this huge chunk of mountain is potentially unstable, there is evidence that it has happened before. Once was even a chunk of literally the same island falling off.
    It is super unlikely. Especially with an eruption like this. Don't worry about it, as far as hazards are concerned.

    • @cliveklg7739
      @cliveklg7739 3 года назад +2

      "The claim that half of Cumbre Vieja dropped 4 m (13 ft) during the 1949 eruption is erroneous, and contradicted by physical evidence.
      No evidence was sought or shown that there is a fault line separating a "block" of La Palma from the other half.
      Physical evidence shows a 4 km (2 mi) long line in the rock, but the models assumed a 25 km (16 mi) line, for which no physical evidence was given. Further, there is no evidence shown that the 4 km (2 mi) long line extends beyond the surface.
      There has never been an Atlantic megatsunami in recorded history.
      A survey carried out by Moss et al.; (1999)[15] reported that the western flank is stable with no indication of aseismic creep being recorded.
      The 1949 crack to be a shallow and inactive surface expression. They do suggest that the crack should be monitored, but consider the possibility that the edifice is unstable as being almost non-existent."

    • @JanSolo555
      @JanSolo555 3 года назад +2

      I agree with most of your analysis, except the comparison to Mt. St. Helens. That was a landslide caused by a literal lateral eruption, which is what caused the bulge. Cumbre Vieja is already erupting, and it’s not a lateral eruption. The bulge is caused by magma trapped completely underground, which is not the case on La Palma. Pressure is being released by the current eruption. A potential landslide would much more likely be sudden, with the unstable block being suddenly dislodged by the ongoing seismic activity associated with the eruption. I’m not sure how close the eruption is to the unstable portion of the island. I actually watched a documentary where they walked inside the crack where the land had subsided.

    • @Lessinath
      @Lessinath 3 года назад +1

      @@JanSolo555 I agree Mt. St. Helens is not the best comparison, but I wanted to make a comparison that people would know that was at least similar. You're correct that the technical details of why it slid are quite different, but at a minimum it is proof that giant landslides are possible.

  • @nancybarnes7109
    @nancybarnes7109 3 года назад +33

    I like the way Polly stands and looks at the guy standing on the lava, as if to say, Dad! Here's somebody being stupid again!

  • @reginaromsey
    @reginaromsey 3 года назад +23

    Valur, you must be heartily sick of climbing that trail. Polly, on the other hand, thinks it is the greatest thing since dog food and balls! Love your coverage almost since the first eruption of Bob.

  • @mikerichards6065
    @mikerichards6065 3 года назад +28

    I was just thinking that we were only going to get the one video this week and then right at the last minute on a Friday evening the best two news broadcasters in the world are back! Thanks Valur and Polly - have a great weekend.

    • @SP_3333
      @SP_3333 3 года назад

      👍❣️

  • @krisklopf1901
    @krisklopf1901 3 года назад +22

    Polly has the zoomies! LOL

  • @wiregold8930
    @wiregold8930 3 года назад +18

    I always feel better after viewing your Newscast. Chief of morale officer is wonderful. Thank you so much.

  • @natatatt
    @natatatt 3 года назад +26

    So impressed with the camera man being able to film so smoothly, while seemingly walking backwards, without wiping out on the uneven terrain.

    • @heartwings2517
      @heartwings2517 3 года назад +14

      I suspect Art is really capable of self levitation. He's too smooth for feet!

    • @spencerkellylanyi3073
      @spencerkellylanyi3073 3 года назад +7

      The colors and shapes of the land are particularly beautiful today. The photography is mezmerizing

    • @joyrisher8841
      @joyrisher8841 3 года назад +2

      @@heartwings2517 I was thinking the same thing -- Art seems to float over the rough terrain.

    • @SkyWire88
      @SkyWire88 3 года назад

      I agree. The camera man is a pro on two feet. Well done ALL.

  • @malcolm20091000
    @malcolm20091000 3 года назад +45

    Maybe the government should hire Clint Eastwood for a couple days to stand out there and yell "Get off my Lava!". Fist shaking would be optional.

  • @gmahin
    @gmahin 3 года назад +29

    Proud of Polly…she knows not to walk on the lava flow….yeah dog sense

  • @heartwings2517
    @heartwings2517 3 года назад +5

    I live on the east coast of the USA & shall be the unofficial Reykjavik Grapevine correspondent. I am happy to report it is a lovely day, there is no tsunami and Donald Trump lost the election.

  • @ruru999able
    @ruru999able 3 года назад +18

    POLLY.... so much more intelligent than many humans xxx

  • @vickygarnett7623
    @vickygarnett7623 3 года назад +14

    So many pillocks on that lava. At this stage, even if one of them fell through and suffered a horrific death, there would still be more pillocks wandering around on it just to see where it happened.

    • @helenamacrae202
      @helenamacrae202 3 года назад +4

      so right you are.. people are just so nosy an think they have no fear about anything, especially over a spewing volcano.. really, i despair.. lol xx

    • @johnzuijdveld9585
      @johnzuijdveld9585 3 года назад +1

      That's when we all pray that the world will open up and swallow them all! 🙏🏻
      Even if they don't die I believe the lava can be very sharp, the cuts would be deep and there could also be toxins in that lava to poison them.

    • @hrford
      @hrford 3 года назад

      @@johnzuijdveld9585 Praying for somebody to die. Interesting. :|

    • @johnzuijdveld9585
      @johnzuijdveld9585 3 года назад

      @@hrford I DONT 🤣 I use the word pray as a figure of speech literally I just hope idiots get what they deserve so bless you too! 🤣

    • @johnzuijdveld9585
      @johnzuijdveld9585 3 года назад

      @@hrford Ever heard the term 'self preservation'? it's supposed to be mans' highest motivational instinct! If someone is so stupid that they have forgotten this, it's NOT because they are brave.
      You would pray to protect idiots that do NOT protect themselves? . . so who IS the fool here?

  • @acerone10
    @acerone10 3 года назад +6

    Did any one notice that this volcano stopped 14 days ago and La Palma started 13 days ago.

  • @denni7173
    @denni7173 3 года назад +5

    Valur Please! As a dog lover like you, I worry about Polly running onto the lava crust. It can seem stable, but give way easily. Humans are responsible for themselves and their silly choices, but Polly isn't. As a geologist, I sadly have seen several people get burned and ond dog and man die from crusts giving way or falling into hidden mud pots. We love you both, and Art!

  • @5Heth
    @5Heth 3 года назад +11

    Hello Valur, Art & Polly 👋🏼. I cannot for the life of me understand why people would risk their lives walking on the lava while it is still so hot that it is steaming. It just makes no sense to me at all. It also amazes me that the lava is still steaming even with the volcano having a little nap for around 2 weeks now. Let’s hope the earthquakes wake the little bugger up soon.
    Love & best wishes to you all from Queensland Australia 🇦🇺❤️

  • @SP_3333
    @SP_3333 3 года назад +7

    Always so nice to see you Valur.
    Love the way you tell the news.
    Tried the Hraun.
    Very addicting 🙂

  • @pablothekiwi
    @pablothekiwi 3 года назад +5

    The Grapevine Newscast is one of the most informative and accessible news programs I have ever seen. Well done Valur, Art and Polly. I love the informal and descriptive way you cover issues and events. You have kept our travel to Iceland alive and have increased our desire to return, all the way from Australia and Aotearoa (Iceland's southern sister of volcanos, sheep and friendly people). Best wishes, Paul and Joanna.

  • @Alan-zi4or
    @Alan-zi4or 3 года назад +11

    Thanks so much for the update and for speaking English for us. Your English is perfect. You live in the most amazing, beautiful country on earth, kindness from Sydney Australia

  • @cfnorg5308
    @cfnorg5308 3 года назад +17

    I heard the La Palma volcano produced 58m³/s at some point. That was like a week ago, no idea if its more or less now. And the fear of a Tsunami is based on the possibility that the whole flank of the La Palma volcano could slip into the Ocean. The chances for this happening on this eruption are ridiculously low, but it happend on other volcanoes in the past. Fogo , Krakatao and Stromboli had volcanic landslides that caused tsunamis for example.

    • @kaosantiorks
      @kaosantiorks 3 года назад +3

      In fact it happened 80,000 years ago on another island in the Canary Islands, "El Hierro" You can see the huge bite in the Gulf Valley "Valle de el Golfo" I create a Megatsunami that reached the coasts of North America and the Caribbean, causing a enormous destruction, visible in geological records.

    • @georgecarroll3470
      @georgecarroll3470 3 года назад +1

      I think they discovered a crack running along the west side, after the 1971 eruption. The Western side had already slipped down by about 2m, and it was predicted, at some point in the future, this side of the mountain could slide into the ocean. Hopefully, there are people monitoring its movements. Hopefully, these people can be trusted to do their job properly.

    • @aoilpe
      @aoilpe 3 года назад

      I think ground deformation is not high enough for this landslide to happen…

    • @johnmurrell3175
      @johnmurrell3175 3 года назад

      Evidence of the landslides underwater at both Hawaii & La Palma was discovered by navies mapping the deep ocean bottom for submarine navigation. They have kept most of the data secret. The one in the North sea was found during oil exploration - that was an underwater cliff that collapsed . The cause of the 1607 tsunami that flooded the Somerset Levels may have been an underwater landslide south of Ireland though other researchers have attributed it to a storm surge.

  • @petebeatminister
    @petebeatminister 3 года назад +14

    There was a bit of glow in the crater last night, or early morning rather. So it is not totally inactive, even if its not comparable to what it was before. But I wouldn't call it over just yet. And I wouldn't walk around on the lava field yet, either...
    But in Iceland you have been lucky so far, as everything happenend in a empty landscape more or less. What is happening on La Palma is really bad, all that property is permanently lost, or for many years to come at least. And if the volcano doesn't soon stop, it could get much worse and destroy most of the populated part of the island.
    To the Tsunami rumors... that has always been a danger, it has nothing to do with the current eruption. The Canari Islands are a group of huge moutains, which are around 7000m high, that are below the sea level except for the summits. There is always the risk of a huge underwater landslide on one of the mountain sides, may be triggered by a strong earthquake. The bit of lava that is flowing into the sea now has no relevance for that.

    • @mikerichards6065
      @mikerichards6065 3 года назад +8

      Hawaiian lava flows of about 10m thick take about 18 months after they stop erupting to completely solidify with temperatures just below the surface well over 100C. It is easy to get burned or put your foot into a hot void.
      The deep pools of lava that will have formed up on Geldingadalur could take decades to solidify, the best example I can think of is Kilauea Iki which erupted in 1959; the lava lake in its crater took 35 years to solidify.
      One really good reason not to walk even on the solid lava flows here is that the surface is made of shards of glass - the video doesn’t show it, but I was blown away by the beautiful iridescent blue glass on these flows. And it is SHARP! I can’t think how many pairs of boots I’ve gone through walking on older, cooler lava flows - and more than a few cuts to the hands in my time.
      Also, the lava is now a national monument, the Icelandic government doesn’t want people damaging it. We’re just visitors to their country, let’s respect it.
      Do what the T-shirt says - Don’t Walk on the Lava.

    • @stuartschaffner9744
      @stuartschaffner9744 3 года назад +4

      I have checked the Nátthagi valley webcam almost every day, even back when the valley floor was free of new lava. For the past month, it has often LOOKED like the lava currently on the floor hasn't changed. Same old flat expanse. However, I could see very liquid lava running down the valley walls and going SOMEWHERE. As the Editor walked along the border, it was clear that this "cool" lava had somehow thickened enormously, with big ridges and valleys. Perhaps the lava moved at only a centimeter a day, but it did move. To move at all, lava has to be at least red hot, enough to badly burn you in a fraction of a second.

    • @mikerichards6065
      @mikerichards6065 3 года назад +2

      @@stuartschaffner9744 I was there last month when the volcano was having a sleep and the lava has definitely got thicker since then. (Here comes the science bit) - lava flows can ‘inflate’ as more lava fills them from the inside - they can gradually blow up like a balloon without anyone ever seeing molten rock.
      And yes, you’re right - the interior will have to be at least 1000C for the lava to flow. It is really hot just below those peoples’ feet.

    • @petebeatminister
      @petebeatminister 3 года назад +2

      @@stuartschaffner9744 Yes, it can be deceptive. On the surface it looks solid, but who knows how thick the crust really is. And also, if there are still some hidden flows in tunnels. As I said, last night there was definatly a orange glow inside the vent, lighting up the smoke above.
      So I think its pretty careless to run around on the lava - especially as it gains you nothing to do so.

  • @nipperr2718
    @nipperr2718 3 года назад +4

    Bushcraft Bear yt for LA palma

  • @JPF1018
    @JPF1018 3 года назад +5

    Thanks, once again for giving good info about the volcano, the volcanic under structure and all things Icelandic. Thanks too for mentioning LaPalma-it’s both spectacular and tragic.

  • @WorldofLadySondrea
    @WorldofLadySondrea 3 года назад +6

    I absolutely love your channel. Love Polly. Such an amazing doggie. Thank you for sharing the wonderful wonders of Iceland. I look forward to newscast. Blessings

  • @NeilHoward
    @NeilHoward 3 года назад +18

    I can't even begin to imagine how dangerous it must be to be walking on that lava. I doubt you can really tell how thick the crust is .. Thanks for all your reporting :)

    • @goldreverre
      @goldreverre 3 года назад +4

      I know right. It's only been there for a few months. Any moment, they could step on the wrong spot and break through 4 metres of solid rock

    • @helenamacrae202
      @helenamacrae202 3 года назад +1

      @@goldreverre yes bruce.. i totally agree with you.. did you notice a couple of them bending down to ''feel'' the heat. to keep warm from the wind.. seems 2 were just standing yakking an warming them selves.. iriots huh.. cheers ..

    • @sweettrubble4635
      @sweettrubble4635 3 года назад +2

      Those people are crazy stupid.

    • @jaodell1
      @jaodell1 3 года назад +1

      @@goldreverre No I don't think they would break through 4 metres of solid rock! The danger is walking on very thin rock and falling into hot rock.

    • @goldreverre
      @goldreverre 3 года назад

      @@jaodell1 Hence my sarcastic response... You don't have very thin rock with hot lava underneath after several months. It's gone cold and solid. If it was thin as you described, you'd feel the heat long before you got there. In fact, if you are fully suited up and can take the heat, you can still walk on hot rock. It's dense and a person is like a mosquito skimming over the top.

  • @christophermiller4471
    @christophermiller4471 3 года назад +13

    A major landslide in La Palma leading to a tsunami is not going to happen with the current eruption. A landslide will only occur if there is sufficient pressure from magma to force the ground to be lifted many metres, as occured several decades ago with Mt. St. Helens. There is currently no evidence of ground uplift in La Palma. So little chance that a landslide leading to a tsunami would be triggered.

    • @georgecarroll3470
      @georgecarroll3470 3 года назад

      Hi Christopher,
      Just a polite question.
      Are you sure a landslip needs land lift to start it. I think heavy rain with land saturation more likely to start a landslide, not right now but at any point in the future.
      You mentioned St Helens, but was that a landslide. I thought it was more that the side of the mountain blew outwards.

    • @christophermiller4471
      @christophermiller4471 3 года назад +1

      @@georgecarroll3470 Heavy rainfall is a common cause of landslides. However the theoretical and unlikely tsunami-causing landslip envisaged in the case of La Palma, where many cubic kilometres of rock slide into the sea causing a dome of water hundreds of metres in height,, would require landlift to be triggered.

    • @aoilpe
      @aoilpe 3 года назад

      @@georgecarroll3470
      The landslide started by an earthquake triggered the explosion 💥 of the first blast of the 1980 eruption…

  • @DisVietVetUSA
    @DisVietVetUSA 3 года назад +10

    Polly has the ripps - I see you still have idiots standing on the hot lava - You doing a fantastic job reporting about Iceland

  • @vronw5782
    @vronw5782 3 года назад +9

    Pollie is a true TV presenter loves playing to the camera
    , happy to approach the public & always digging out a story 😂 last time Polly went digging, didn't the volcano go crazy? 😜 . Great to see you and love the news update ❤ xx

    • @helenamacrae202
      @helenamacrae202 3 года назад +3

      hahaha you noticed her then.. ahh aye she is lovin the camera or the chap that runs it.. x

  • @kaosantiorks
    @kaosantiorks 3 года назад +3

    Thank you very much for talking about what is happening in La Palma. I have followed you since the beginning of the eruption of the volcano in Iceland. You do a good job. Greetings from Madrid Spain!
    ....................
    Muchas gracias por hablar de lo que esta sucediendo en la Palma. Os sigo desde el inicio de la erupción de el volcán de Islandia. Hacéis un buen trabajo. Un saludo desde Madrid España!

  • @njdevilku1340
    @njdevilku1340 3 года назад +8

    Get off the lava!!!

    • @deannelson9565
      @deannelson9565 3 года назад

      That lava is perfectly safe to walk on other then you could get cut or hurt a leg. You know it all internet experts who have never spent a single moment of your life on lava fields are getting annoying with your lack of understanding of how lava fields actually work.

    • @cproteus
      @cproteus 3 года назад +1

      @@deannelson9565 wow, what an expert you are… tell us more about how safe it is to walk on lava. *sarcasm*

    • @deannelson9565
      @deannelson9565 3 года назад

      @@cproteus 30 Years of Living next to and on an active lava flow I'll put my experience up against yours! A lava field like this sure you can fall and break a leg or get cut but this constant worry of falling into liquid hot lava is nothing short of fucking stupid!

    • @cproteus
      @cproteus 3 года назад +2

      @@deannelson9565 it’s not a “constant worry of falling into hot lava” but the lava *is* flowing under the surface. There *have* been videos here published of the lava calving, and it’s needless risk for stupid internet fame when the ICE-SAR teams are all volunteers. It’s irresponsible, foolish and basically rude to come to a place and risk other people for a stupid photo opportunity.
      But hey, I will put my 33+ years working in medicine dealing with the aftermath of people’s stupidity and having to explain to their loved ones some hard realities against your luck so far, my friend.
      All the best to you - I hope you don’t risk any of our lives with your flippancy.

    • @missmb2u
      @missmb2u 3 года назад +2

      I have a comment about the judge who claimed that his mistake was “tradition“. Most judges are first of all lawyers, and lawyers have learned to try to talk themselves out of just about any situation. I know this because I am a retired lawyer. His excuse sounds bogus to me but thankfully his actions did not have significant repercussions regarding the election result.
      I am also amazed at the sheer number of idiots on the lava.🤦🏼‍♀️

  • @markydaly6816
    @markydaly6816 3 года назад +3

    Valur, (and Art and Poly) thank you so much for sharing your adventures on the Fagradalsfjall volcano with us. My wife and I have been hooked on your videos since March!

  • @vronw5782
    @vronw5782 3 года назад +5

    Gees very stupid people on the lava 😳 you can clearly see its steaming 🌋

  • @stephenrickstrew7237
    @stephenrickstrew7237 3 года назад +5

    The establishing Drone shot was a great way to open this episode …

  • @PaulRichards78
    @PaulRichards78 3 года назад +6

    At one point it was 59 cubic metres per sec of lava flow for La Palma

  • @imsbvs
    @imsbvs 3 года назад +3

    Lava Centre has an earthquake alert service, signed up when I was there in 2018, have received several alert emails this week linked to the activity near Keillir.

    • @juliocean1331
      @juliocean1331 3 года назад

      I agree. It's a great service. Glad that I signed up! 🌋

  • @lesliefischer6680
    @lesliefischer6680 3 года назад +7

    ‘Oh, look! They’re on the lava so it must be safe, let’s go wander on the smoking lava too.’ Lol

  • @davebatts4731
    @davebatts4731 3 года назад +4

    I was thinking "Even Polly has sense to stay off the lava," until 15:22. But then, she only hopped on the edge for a moment.

  • @anemjoful
    @anemjoful 3 года назад +4

    Thankful for your reports. Been following you for awhile. Can always count on your on the scene reporting. Hoping the volcanoe will become dormant. Prayers for your family and you.

  • @JaRiS993
    @JaRiS993 3 года назад +8

    iceland volcano has been filling the valleys, the canarian one just went down hill

    • @MartinSlucutt
      @MartinSlucutt 3 года назад +1

      Also the Canarian one had 2-3 storey high lava flows! :-o

  • @Room-180
    @Room-180 3 года назад +4

    Hi,
    the La Palma tsunami theory does not base on lava hitting the ocean, but from - a fissure could cause a part of the island breaking off the mainland and fall into the ocean and cause the tsunami.

    • @MarcoNierop
      @MarcoNierop 3 года назад +1

      Yes, agree with that 100% I watched an online video about that La palma scenario some time ago.
      Tsunamis are caused by HUGE SUDDEN MOVEMENT of HUGE pieces of landmass... Lava dripping into the ocean does not fill that catagory of huge landmass moving suddenly. Simple as that.

  • @Jefuslives
    @Jefuslives 3 года назад +3

    Re La Palma: The mega-tsunami risk has nothing to do with lava hitting the ocean. It has to do with the potential for a large section of the island, which is surrounded by a deep rift, to collapse into the ocean. It would take MUCH stronger seismic activity than this magmatic system is capable of producing to precipitate such a sector collapse.

    • @arnedendooven3972
      @arnedendooven3972 3 года назад

      This collapse in the ocean is not from a single event, but will be the result of many seismic activities. Many activities over time = as 1 strong or big event, with every activity the structure weakens. At some point in time one activity will been proven to be one too many, then the structure fails and collapse in the ocean that generates a tsunami wave. The force of the wave depends on how smooth the slide is and how far the chunk of land separates of its original location.

  • @knocklap
    @knocklap 3 года назад +4

    the opening aerial drone shot was brilliant. For the first time I could see the "reverse" view to Reikjavik from the lava field. Are pilots pointing out the place on their approach or ascent from Keflavik?

  • @dickdaley9059
    @dickdaley9059 3 года назад +22

    “ I only walk on lava to get his attention. He flaps his gums and strolls around without playing with me!” 👅🐾🐾

  • @okeydokey3120
    @okeydokey3120 3 года назад +2

    Thank you. 💞 I've been a subscriber since before the eruption, and you are still my favorite. Much love from Oklahoma 💞. Brenda

  • @tizianomina2570
    @tizianomina2570 3 года назад +2

    Greetings from La Palma.
    Thank you for talking about La Palma, where I live.
    I have the volcano 5 km from home and for 15 days I have been able to see its evolution.
    Very impressed, especially the continuous noise.
    Hola
    Tiziano

  • @PiousMoltar
    @PiousMoltar 3 года назад +9

    I'm not much of a dog person but Polly is the best!

  • @WhiteTiger333
    @WhiteTiger333 3 года назад +2

    Gotta love the people behind you walking out on smoking lava. :D And, haha, you apologize to strangers for Polly, while they are so happy interacting with Polly. At the end, I was so focused on the Darwin award wannabees, I almost missed Polly coming up on the left. Ach, the crackling packaging as you opened the Hraun bar...yes, yes, my next order will definitely include that one, as well as more Polo biscuits, Krem-kex and more samplings of the awesome Omnom chocolates.

  • @johnmurrell3175
    @johnmurrell3175 3 года назад +2

    I walked on the 1971 lava flow in La Palma in the early 1980's and the fumes coming out of the cracks were still hot enough to melt the sole of your shoes . If you stuck sticks or twigs into the cracks they would burst into flames. No one worried about the dangers then but the lava was over 10 years old.
    I wonder how the risk of walking on the lava compares to the risks of walking around the hot springs where the water is approaching 100 C and the soil is quite fragile.

  • @Norfolk250
    @Norfolk250 3 года назад +16

    I wonder how smart Polly is, not to go onto the lava to join the people she sees in the background - knowing that she loves the attention she gets from strangers.

    • @stuartschaffner9744
      @stuartschaffner9744 3 года назад

      Polly has no shoes, only leather pads. That lava is sharp as broken glass because, well, it IS broken glass

  • @feralbluee
    @feralbluee 3 года назад +2

    thank you for your reports and mentioning La Palma. so your lava is more spread out, but La Palma has more lava in area than yours. it is getting very serious there. people don’t feel safe in the areas further from the volcano itself any more. it’s scary. volcano “god”, please stop now!! ⚡️🧖🏾‍♂️

  • @babs2424-p8e
    @babs2424-p8e 3 года назад +3

    I love Polly, wonderful dog, had my dog 19 years.

  • @sharon94503
    @sharon94503 3 года назад +4

    Hate to hear about election doubts...I live in the US...enough said. 😒

  • @haraldurkarlsson1147
    @haraldurkarlsson1147 3 года назад +2

    It is a rift zone. And as has been stated a divergent plate boundary. Rifting in Iceland tends to be episodic not continuous and we are witnessing such an episode. The earthquakes are caused by the rifting in the volcanic belt.

  • @judithfalconer1911
    @judithfalconer1911 3 года назад +3

    I love watching your videos with Polly in them. What a wonderful dog she is, I'm sorry I never got to meet her in person. I suspect that your volcano isn't finished yet.

  • @kakapojayne
    @kakapojayne 3 года назад +5

    I don't know what's worse - people walking on the lava or people doing it dressed entirely in black, so that if they fell and hurt themselves, nobody could find them because they'd be so hard to spot! Mind = boggled

    • @helenamacrae202
      @helenamacrae202 3 года назад

      aye, the mind boggles.. but ''they ''do not seem to have working mind.. hmmm .. polly certainly does tho' a right cutey she is.. x

  • @iduswelton9567
    @iduswelton9567 3 года назад +3

    Polly just proves what is said about Border Collie's-their very active like to dig- friendly to everyone- need lots or exercise and quiet and beautiful dogs

  • @melissahdawn
    @melissahdawn 3 года назад +6

    I like the idea of naming a thing nameless. 👌

    • @seismogenic
      @seismogenic 3 года назад +1

      There's a volcano in Siberia, Bezymianny, whose name does translate to "no name"!

  • @viv1921
    @viv1921 3 года назад +2

    Goodness me Iceland la Palmer and hawai! Busy busy
    Love your crazeee Border collie Polly 🙏

  • @hansschleichert7852
    @hansschleichert7852 3 года назад +3

    Austria had a situation that was comparable to what you reported about Icelandic elections. When in 2016 the election of the President (Bundespräsident) was over, it revealed that postal votes had been counted days before the law allowed it. It was argued that this was a kind of tradition and had always been like that. Finally the Constitutional Court (Verfassungsgerichtshof) ruled that the elections had to be repeated. It didn't change the outcome though, but they will sure have a closer look at the calendar before they start to open postal votes.
    Not to speak about the German elections (Bundestagswahl) 2021 when some Berlin polling places run out of ballots, but that is a different story and still under investigation.

  • @josephlak9366
    @josephlak9366 3 года назад +5

    Sir thank you for your info stay safe

  • @jameslynnbudlong5658
    @jameslynnbudlong5658 3 года назад +2

    Thanks again for the news and great photography!

  • @alanswindells2257
    @alanswindells2257 3 года назад +4

    A quick comment regarding the idea of La Palma creating a mega tsunami. The idea was that the whole side of the mountain could fall away and slide into the ocean. This was because there was what appeared to be a fault near the ridge that forms the spine of the island. The is no indication that this fault is anything more than a surface feature.
    So no mega-tsunami.

    • @mikerichards6065
      @mikerichards6065 3 года назад +1

      Thanks for adding that Alan - saved me some typing. La Palma is probably pretty stable, however, Hawaii might be one to watch (if you have a few million years and nothing else to do), there are a series of massive slides off of Oahu and Molokai caused by the sides of volcanoes sliding downhill. But I wouldn’t put off a trip to Hawaii because of that!

    • @alanswindells2257
      @alanswindells2257 3 года назад +1

      @@mikerichards6065 Quite. The chance of a mega-tsunami happening in our lifetime is, how can I put this, mega-slight.

    • @mikerichards6065
      @mikerichards6065 3 года назад

      @@alanswindells2257 though some days I just think it’d be easier if Norway put us out of our misery and sent another Storegga Slide heading our way!

    • @alanswindells2257
      @alanswindells2257 3 года назад

      @@mikerichards6065 That would be, what, a 5 metre tsunami in eastern Scotland, 3 metres in East Anglia?
      But what would coastal Lancashire, where I am, get? Less than a metre I would guess because of the narrows between Ireland and Scotland. It might knock some sense into some,I guess.
      But then, we might be able to generate our own. Wasn't there some (admittedly rather wild) speculation that a similar event in the southern Irish sea causing massive flooding around the Bristol Channel in the early 17th century?

    • @mikerichards6065
      @mikerichards6065 3 года назад +1

      @@alanswindells2257 well remembered, there was a theory that a submarine earthquake in the SW Approaches caused a tsunami along the Severn in 1607. More recently, it’s been disproved as there were similar floods right around the UK at the same time, so it was probably a storm surge along the lines of the catastrophic North Sea floods that devastated the Netherlands and the East Coast in 1953.
      Can’t promise a tsunami of any size coming your way - the closest I can see is the one from the mysterious 1755 Lisbon earthquake (still largely unexplained) which saw a tsunami hit Cornwall where huge boulders where thrown ashore in places like Lamorna. There are also some records from the Dark Ages that suggest an 11th Century tsunami killed large numbers of people in Cornwall. Annoyingly, they were too busy with the woad and wicker men to keep proper scientific records which might say what happened - honestly, some people…

  • @jrisner1951
    @jrisner1951 3 года назад +3

    The plates are spreading apart in Iceland.

  • @CaptRescue2
    @CaptRescue2 3 года назад +4

    Winter is coming......You should call the people walking on the Lava "Walkers"

    • @helenamacrae202
      @helenamacrae202 3 года назад +1

      i presume you are joking.. as i would not give them idiots the satisfaction of being titled by the good guys.. lol

    • @CaptRescue2
      @CaptRescue2 3 года назад

      @@helenamacrae202 Right!

  • @charleensampson6816
    @charleensampson6816 3 года назад +1

    The geography is stunning, as I've been watching you since the beginning of Bob!
    You've done a fantastic job with the drone footage of the volcano, and the history of your homeland of Iceland....Keep up the great job....Much lava to you, and your beautiful 4-legged furry friend! 💯❤️🌞✌️🕊️🤗🙏

  • @williamlloyd3769
    @williamlloyd3769 3 года назад +1

    Hopefully those responsible for elections will take heed and work on improving procedures as well as improving training.

  • @smashICE1
    @smashICE1 3 года назад +1

    Thanks your you updates!
    Crazy to see steam comming out of the cracks of weeks old lava and people still don't realize that there's an immanent danger of walking on lava ...

  • @stuw4943
    @stuw4943 3 года назад +1

    Valur showing great restraint not to shout at the idiots walking on the lava! It’ll just take one knobhead to get injured and/or burnt and then they’ll stop…may be! Great newscast. Thanks guys and Polly.

  • @johnzuijdveld9585
    @johnzuijdveld9585 3 года назад +1

    I think the numbers you mention in the election should just be seen as 'human error' they were too small to make any real difference although some who would've become M.P.s are not.
    Polly is a reflection on you Valur, she's obviously well loved, played with and not spoken to or treated angrily, so she has absolutely no fear of other humans and enjoys socializing with them.
    Yes 600 houses destroyed, it's a stark difference from your volcano safely away from threatening anyone anytime soon. My heart goes out to the folk on La Palma and it would be interresting to hear what support they will receive from the Spanish govt.

  • @damama4209
    @damama4209 3 года назад +3

    Bushcraft Bear on RUclips is a local in La Palma, Canary Island who has been giving updates on what's happening there. Good info. Thought I'd just pass that on. Always love watching Polly in the background just being herself. Thanks for the info

  • @johncranwell3783
    @johncranwell3783 3 года назад +2

    Excellent as always Valur! I wish all news programs were presented you way 🙏

  • @delzworld2007
    @delzworld2007 3 года назад +3

    Enjoyed your chat today but you said that democracy is quite new to Iceland. What about Pingvellir where the Althing was founded in 930AD. This is regarded as the oldest form of parliament in the world, I think, and by its very nature, was democratic.

    • @Henri.Virallinen
      @Henri.Virallinen 3 года назад +2

      He would be referring to Iceland's modern democracy. It was not fully independent from Denmark until 1944

    • @TheReykjavikGrapevine
      @TheReykjavikGrapevine  3 года назад +7

      Yes, we have the longest running parliament in the world of course, but like Henry said, we were of course under the Danish monarchy for hundreds of years before we became free again.

    • @nickylambert5462
      @nickylambert5462 3 года назад

      Valur is talking about freedom to govern themselves 😃

  • @claudiapeterson3637
    @claudiapeterson3637 3 года назад +3

    Valur and Polly....thank you for a great volcanocast!

  • @quantumcat7673
    @quantumcat7673 3 года назад +1

    The lava field is full of caverns and cracks which might offer some warm places this winter for foxes and small mammals.

  • @viv1921
    @viv1921 3 года назад +3

    This volcanoe has been spectacular in every way and she has gone to sleep and now la palma puts on a major display thank you for the million miles you have walked with Polly dog got a feeling there will be more 🙏❤️😎

  • @jackparsons390
    @jackparsons390 3 года назад +2

    Valur is brilliant

  • @lauxmyth
    @lauxmyth 3 года назад +1

    Did the vid show two people walking on the lava? "What could go wrong?"

  • @pnield5866
    @pnield5866 3 года назад +2

    Polly's 'bad' example made me laugh so hard I cried! What a doggo. 🥰

  • @JonathanRootD
    @JonathanRootD 3 года назад +4

    Sounds like the lava is moving to a new location

  • @KarinMurati
    @KarinMurati 3 года назад +1

    Maybe a stupid question, but why are there so many stones lying on the lava?

  • @angelashowalter7148
    @angelashowalter7148 3 года назад +4

    Very happy to hear about your election procedures being up held! Polly is adorable!

  • @grannygear1001
    @grannygear1001 3 года назад +1

    Someone has the zoomies …lol. Hi Polly. My huskies would luv to play with you. 🐕

  • @susandewolfe4876
    @susandewolfe4876 3 года назад +1

    Polly is smart....she avoids walking on the lava.

  • @neoforce0
    @neoforce0 3 года назад +1

    Would it all just be one really wide volcano and not a separate one? Maybe just a different vent that will make a new crater hill ... For tsunami's my guess would need a big explosion or a big earthquake that can really move the water in big quantities like the Japanese quake

  • @Dstew57A
    @Dstew57A 3 года назад +1

    Polly knows when your talking about her🐶

  • @njdevilku1340
    @njdevilku1340 3 года назад +3

    P.s I've already subscribed!!!

  • @gmahin
    @gmahin 3 года назад +3

    Dog 1: people 0

  • @podcarsten
    @podcarsten 3 года назад +3

    Chief officer of Moral walking on the lava. ha ha ha.

    • @podcarsten
      @podcarsten 3 года назад

      Valur needs to find another title for Polly, like "Public contact manager" or "happines coach."

  • @magdagarcia942
    @magdagarcia942 3 года назад +1

    I think las Palmas is super intetesting

  • @ashleytower7061
    @ashleytower7061 3 года назад +1

    Hello from Salt Lake City, UT, USA. Just wanted to tell you Thank You for all the amazing videos. We love them and share then all the time. I'm looking at your channel think you should update your pix and background. You have some of the most spectacular shots that would more accurately represent your channel. Also if you have shirts or a Patreon set up I would like to support your Channel. Be safe and Thanks again!

    • @TheReykjavikGrapevine
      @TheReykjavikGrapevine  3 года назад

      Hey Ashley, thanks for the comments and feedback, we're working on some big updates over here so please check back in soon!

  • @njdevilku1340
    @njdevilku1340 3 года назад +3

    15:24 bad Polly!!!

  • @aprilcoast6756
    @aprilcoast6756 3 года назад +1

    All those people on the lava! 🙄

  • @dannyvandenbergh8108
    @dannyvandenbergh8108 3 года назад +3

    Surtsey island in the South?

    • @mikerichards6065
      @mikerichards6065 3 года назад +2

      Yep, Valur was thinking of Surtsey which erupted in 1963 until 1967. The other volcano he mentioned was an eruption on Heimaey in 1973 when a new volcano erupted just outside of the town. The island was evacuated and the lava threatened Iceland’s biggest fishing port. There was a heroic operation by the Icelanders and the US Navy to pump billions of litres of seawater on the advancing lava and they stopped the flow from destroying the town. The lava was diverted into the ocean and it actually formed a new breakwater that protected the harbour.
      Eventually people were able to return and the town was rebuilt. Some houses were buried in ash and are being excavated right now as a time capsule into life in early 1970s.
      One person died in the eruption (and perhaps some sheep) and I think they were the last person to die in an Icelandic eruption.
      If you ever go to Iceland, I recommend taking a trip to over to Heimaey; it’s amazingly beautiful, the volcano museum is great and you can easily climb the new volcano Eldfell and feel the heat just below the surface after nearly 50 years. It is only a few years since the lava cooled below a point where it wasn’t actually hot enough to generate electricity.
      The Eldfell eruption is the setting for Yrsa Sigurðadottir’s murder mystery ‘Ashes to Ashes’ which is a great read.

    • @dannyvandenbergh8108
      @dannyvandenbergh8108 3 года назад +1

      @@mikerichards6065 I know, I went to Heimaey, quite impressive to see the remains of the houses - I've also read the novel of Yrsa ;-)