PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Potential long-term volcanic activity on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula

Potential long-term volcanic activity on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula
2024-06-26
(Press-News.org) Given the volcanic activity on Iceland over the last three years, researchers from six universities anticipate recurring, moderately sized eruptions of similar style in the coming years to decades. They therefore stress the need for preparedness in view of the risks posed to local populations and critical infrastructure. Their study was recently published in the scientific journal Terra Nova.


“The study uses information from local earthquakes and geochemical data on the erupted magma through time to reveal the geological processes behind these recent Icelandic eruptions. A comparison of these eruptions with historical events provides strong evidence that Iceland will have to prepare and be ready for this volcanic episode to continue for some time, possibly even years to decades,” says Valentin Troll, Professor of Petrology at Uppsala University.


The study examines eruptions that began in 2021 in the Svartsengi-Fagradalsfjall-Krýsuvík area, noting the significant impact on local communities, including the evacuation of the entire town of Grindavik. An international team of scientists, including researchers from Uppsala University (Sweden), the University of Iceland, the Czech Academy of Sciences, Brno University of Technology (Czechia), the University of Oregon (USA) and the University of California at San Diego (USA) used earthquake data and geochemical analysis of lava and tephra samples. They have uncovered critical details about the geological processes behind these eruptions. Historically, Iceland experiences volcanic eruptions every three to five years. The recent eruptions, however, suggest a potentially extended period of activity on the Reykjanes Peninsula. Since 2021, there have been seven fissure eruptions.


“Based on prior eruptive behaviour, this pattern is likely to continue into the future, posing considerable risk to the local population and to important infrastructure, such as Keflavík Airport, several geothermal power plants, the Blue Lagoon tourist spa, and population centres like Keflavík, Grindavík, and Greater Reykjavik,” Troll continues.


A key finding of the study is the interconnected nature of the magma plumbing system beneath the peninsula. Geochemical and seismic data indicate that the eruptions are fed from a shared magma reservoir approximately 9–12 km deep beneath Fagradalsfjall, rather than separate sources or a larger peninsula-wide reservoir. This is why the researchers suggest a recurring pattern of eruptions in the coming years to decades.


“Our findings provide valuable information for anticipating and managing future volcanic activity on the Reykjavik Peninsula. We would like to stress the need for preparedness,” says Frances Deegan, Researcher at Uppsala University and co-author of the study.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Potential long-term volcanic activity on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula Potential long-term volcanic activity on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula 2 Potential long-term volcanic activity on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study finds innovative cuffless blood pressure device streamlines and enhances hypertension management

Study finds innovative cuffless blood pressure device streamlines and enhances hypertension management
2024-06-26
A study led by a Brigham investigator evaluated a novel device that automatically measures blood pressure at the wrist, generating hundreds of readings within days that may help clinicians determine cardiovascular risk and improve hypertension care  High blood pressure, the leading risk factor for death worldwide, is present in one in every two adults. Only one-quarter of individuals with hypertension have their blood pressure under control, highlighting the need for innovative strategies for blood pressure management. A study led by an investigator from Brigham and Women’s ...

Iceland’s volcano eruptions may last decades, researchers find

Iceland’s volcano eruptions may last decades, researchers find
2024-06-26
Iceland’s ongoing volcanic eruptions may continue on and off for years to decades, threatening the country’s most densely populated region and vital infrastructure, researchers predict from local earthquake and geochemical data.   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 ...

Research shows children and adolescents may be motivated to rectify gender and ethnicity biases in the classroom

2024-06-26
A new Child Development study by researchers at the University of Maryland, Furman University, Education Northwest and University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa in the United States, examined whether children think it’s unfair for a teacher to select students from only one gender or ethnic group for leadership duties.  Researchers learned that children and adolescents are not only aware of these situations, but they are also motivated to rectify these types of inequalities in the classroom. Understanding ...

Research shows maternal cell phone use may negatively impact infant language development

2024-06-26
Research suggests that phone use may have an effect on children’s speech input and language development. However, most of the prior work in this area examines parents and children in controlled laboratory experiments in public spaces and may not be representative of daily interactions between a child and their caregivers.  New research in Child Development by the University of Texas at Austin in the United States is the first to combine objective markers of speech (via audio recorders worn by infants) and maternal cell phone use from cell phone logs. This research helps document ...

Is it time to stop recommending strict salt restriction in people with heart failure?

2024-06-26
For decades, it’s been thought that people with heart failure should drastically reduce their dietary salt intake, but some studies have suggested that salt restriction could be harmful for these patients. A recent review in the European Journal of Clinical Investigation that assessed all relevant studies published between 2000 and 2023 has concluded that there is no proven clinical benefit to this strategy for patients with heart failure. Most relevant randomized trials were small, and a single large, ...

Should Iceland expect continued volcanic eruptions?

2024-06-26
Research published in Terra Nova provides insights into the ongoing eruption series on the Reykjanes Peninsula in Iceland that began in 2021. The eruptions forced the evacuation of an entire town, with an uncertain future about the possibility for residents to return. For the study, investigators analyzed information from local earthquakes and geochemical data on lava samples erupted through time. The combined evidence implies that the lavas that have erupted in recent years were derived from a moderately-sized magma reservoir ...

Which adolescents are at risk of depression following early social media use?

2024-06-26
A new study that looked for relationships between early social media use and depression across adolescence and into young adulthood found that certain factors may make social media more risky or protective regarding depression. The findings, which are published in the Journal of Adolescence, suggest that social media use does not impact all adolescents in the same way, and an individualized approach is needed to determine the benefits and harms of social media on young people’s mental health. For the study, 488 adolescents living in the United States were surveyed once a year for 8 years ...

New guidance available for peanut desensitization therapy in patients with peanut allergy

2024-06-26
Based on focus groups with children and young people with peanut allergy, experts have published guidance for clinicians working in the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) to help them safely and equitably implement Palforzia® peanut oral immunotherapy. Their recommendations are published in Clinical & Experimental Allergy. In 2022, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence in the UK recommended the use of Palforzia®—which has defatted peanut powder as its active ingredient—for desensitizing children ...

Why are scientists concerned about the effects of non-native horses and burros on natural ecosystems?

2024-06-26
Worldwide, introduced non-native herbivores have the potential to threaten native ecosystems. For example, in western North America, uncontrolled numbers of feral horses and burros are threatening natural habitats and the native wildlife that rely on them. New research published in the wildlife research journal Wildlife Monographs documents the impact that non-native burros are having on plant and animal life in the Sonoran Desert of North America. Investigators found that the presence of burros was associated with changes to long-lived plants important to the region. In areas with established burro herds, researchers documented lower ground cover, plant density, and foliage density, ...

New epidemiological tool provides warnings of heat and cold related mortality by sex and age in Europe

2024-06-26
Ambient temperatures are associated with over 5 million premature deaths worldwide every year, more than 300,000 of which in Western Europe alone. In a context of rapidly warming temperatures that successively broke previous records during the last two decades, it is essential to use epidemiological models to develop novel, impact-based early warning systems predicting the health effects of forecast temperatures. This is precisely what the Adaptation group at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a centre supported by the "la Caixa" Foundation, has done: Forecaster.health is the first pan-European, open-access platform using sex- and age-specific epidemiological ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

What motivates runners? Focusing on the “how” rather than the “why”

Researchers capture new antibiotic resistance mechanisms with trace amounts of DNA

New research in JNCCN offers a simplified way to identify harmful medications in older adults with cancer

State school finance reforms increased racial and ethnic funding inequities, new study finds

Endocrine Society honors endocrinology field’s leaders with 2026 Laureate Awards    

Decoding high-grade endometrial cancer: a molecular-histologic integration using the Cancer Genome Atlas framework

An exploding black hole could reveal the foundations of the universe

Childhood traumatic events and transgender identity are strongly associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors in university students

UVA to test if MRI can reveal undetected brain injuries in soldiers

Mount Sinai Morningside unveils new, state-of-the-art facility for patients who need inpatient rehabilitation

BD² announces new funding opportunities focused on biology of bipolar disorder

“Want to, but can’t”: A new model to explain the gap in waste separation behavior

Highly sensitive, next-generation wearable pressure sensors inspired by cat whiskers

Breaking the code of sperm motion: Two proteins found to be vital for male fertility

UC Irvine poll: Californians support stricter tech regulations for children

Study finds critically endangered sharks being sold as food in U.S. grocery stores

Meat from critically endangered sharks is commonly sold under false labels in the US

‘Capture strategies’ are harming efforts to save our planet warns scientists

Misconceptions keep some cancer patient populations from benefitting from hormone therapy

Predicting the green glow of aurorae on the red planet

Giant DNA discovered hiding in your mouth

Children lose muscle during early cancer treatment — new ECU study warns of a hidden danger to recovery 

World-first koala chlamydia vaccine approved

Taking the pulse of digital health in Asia

Even healthy children can be severely affected by RSV

Keto diet linked to reduced depression symptoms in college students

Blood test identifies HPV-associated head and neck cancers up to 10 years before symptoms

Odds of dementia strongly linked to number of co-existing mental health disorders

Large social and economic inequalities persist among UK doctors

Research reveals how microplastics threaten Gulf of Mexico marine life

[Press-News.org] Potential long-term volcanic activity on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula