Iceland's Most Active Volcano
Grímsvötn is Iceland's most active volcano—a basaltic central volcano located beneath the Vatnajökull ice cap. Its caldera is ~8 km wide. Because magma interacts with overlying ice, eruptions are typically explosive and generate ash plumes and glacial outburst floods. Grímsvötn has produced about 70 eruptions in historical time and usually erupts every 5–10 years.
The name comes from the subglacial lakes formed by geothermal heat melting the glacier ice above the volcano. "Grímur" was likely a settler or mythological figure, and "vötn" means lakes in Icelandic.
When Grímsvötn erupts, magma meets ice creating explosive phreatomagmatic eruptions. These produce massive ash plumes that can reach 20km high and disrupt air travel across Europe.
Grímsvötn has produced about 70 eruptions in historical time, making it Iceland's most active volcano.
Grímsvötn's regular eruption pattern makes it one of the most studied volcanoes in Iceland.
Grímsvötn last erupted in 2011, meaning the volcano is currently beyond its typical 5-10 year repose period. Scientists closely monitor for signs of the next eruption, which could occur at any time. Inflation of the magma chamber has been observed, suggesting magma accumulation. A subglacial lake and geothermal area under the caldera melt ice and store water, so floods are common when eruptions occur.
Eruptions melt massive amounts of glacier ice, creating catastrophic floods that can destroy bridges and roads. The water builds up under the ice before bursting out in a massive surge.
Explosive eruptions produce ash plumes that can reach the stratosphere, disrupting air travel across Europe and the North Atlantic.
While most Grímsvötn eruptions are short-lived (3-7 days), they can temporarily affect:
When Grímsvötn erupts, stay informed through vedur.is and safetravel.is. Avoid areas near glacial rivers that could flood, and follow aviation advisories if traveling during eruptions.