Hekla is a volcano located in the south of Iceland at , with a height of 1,491 metres (4,890 ft). Hekla is Iceland's most active volcano; over 20 outbreaks having occurred in and around the volcano since 874. During the Middle Ages, Icelanders called the volcano the "Gateway to Hell."
Hekla is part of a volcanic ridge, 40 km (25 miles) long. However, the most active part of this ridge, about 5 km (3 mi) long, is considered to be the volcano Hekla proper. Looking rather like an overturned boat, with its keel being in fact a series of craters, two of which are generally the most active.
The earliest recorded eruption of Hekla took place in the ninth century, although very likely there had been many before that date. Since then there have been between twenty and thirty considerable eruptions, with the mountain sometimes remaining active for periods of six years with little pause. Hekla took a long rest of more than sixty years duration prior to 1845, when it suddenly burst forth on September 2 (Anonymous, 1872):
Eruptions in Hekla are extremely varied and difficult to predict. Some are very short (a week to ten days) whereas others can stretch into months and years (the 1947 eruption started March 29, 1947 and ended April 1948).
The most recent eruption was on February 26, 2000.
Report on this last eruption in January, 2003: Up until now, it has always been assumed that Hekla was incapable of producing that most dangerous of volcanic phenomena, the pyroclastic flow. Now, however, a team from the Norvol Institute in Reykjavík (see link below), under the leadership of Dr. Ármann Höskuldsson, has reported that they have found traces of a small pyroclastic flow, roughly 5 km long, stretching down the side of the mountain. This will call for a reappraisal of volcanic eruptions of the basic rock type, which up to now were generally admitted never to produce pyroclastic flows. It will also require that the public and curious spectators who always rush to the scene at the start of a new outbreak, to be kept much further away from the volcanic activity than was thought necessary during previous outbreaks.
This volcano erupted in 2000, 1991, 1980, 1970, 1947, 1845, 1766, 1693, 1636, 1597, 1510, 1434, 1389, 1341, 1300, 1222, 1206, 1158 and 1104. One of the most significant eruptions was the massive Hekla III eruption of 1159 BC which threw 12 cubic kilometres of volcanic rock into the atmosphere and caused global tree ring events (arrested tree growth) which lasted for 18 years as well as numerous crop failures in Ancient Egypt. Its effects on the environment lasted almost 2 decades until approximately 1141 BC.
Main eruptions in prehistoric times:
Some of this text is based on the book Project Gutenberg e-text "Wonders of Creation - A Descriptive Account of Volcanoes and Their Phenomena", Anonymous, 1872. See *
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