Posted on 04/16/2010 2:17:57 PM PDT by blam
No End In Sight For Havoc Of Icelandic Volcano
Planes are indefinitely grounded, and this eruption could trigger a larger volcano nearby
Chris Sorensen
Friday, April 16, 2010 4:48pm
The Icelandic volcano eruption that has thrown the entire European airline industry into crisis this weekwhen a massive cloud of ash forced the shutdown of airspace over the Continenthas actually been brewing for several months. After nearly 200 years of lying dormant, the volcano beneath the Eyjafjallajökull glacier on Icelands southern coast began to rumble to life last December. The first sign of trouble was a series of earthquakes that suggested that magma, the molten rock beneath the Earths crust, was on the move. Then, late in the evening on March 20, a fissure opened up on the side of the glacier, spewing fountains of lava into the air.
The eruption, initially a tourist attraction, quieted down after a few weeks. Then, on Wednesday evening, an explosionthe result of built up pressuresent a massive plume of volcanic ash some six kilometres into the atmosphere. As the cloud of fine particles drifted over Northern Europe, authorities took the unprecedented step on Thursday of cancelling flights in and out of the United Kingdom, while flights in and out of several Scandinavian countries were also scrubbed, leaving thousands of travellers stranded. The concern is that the powdery volcanic ash, which can be difficult to see with the naked eye and doesnt show up on weather radar systems, can clog up the engines of jet airplanes causing them to malfunction or stop working entirely. By Friday, the situation hadnt improved much as the ash cloud began to drift south, with some 17,000 more flights expected to be cancelled.
Its difficult to tell how long the unusualand hugely expensivesituation will last. It all depends on how long the volcano continues to erupt and whether there is a change of wind patterns over Europe to disperse the cloud. Its also possible that the worst may not be over. Some scientists are worried that the eruption could trigger another, larger, Icelandic volcano nearby, called Katla. The maximum flow in glacial bursts caused by Katla can be 50 or 100 times more voluminous than what we have seen, Helgi Björnsson, a glaciologist, told the magazine Iceland Review. There are eruption channels between Eyjafjallajökull and Katla and magma could shoot into the Katla volcano. Katla might only need a nudge.
The International Air Transit Association says the current shutdown of European airspace is costing the global airline industry about $US200 million a day. That includes lost revenues and the cost of rebooking and rerouting passengers. Peter Fitzpatrick, a spokesman for Air Canada, said the airline had cancelled a total of 56 flights over the past two days. He said he had no idea when the airline would be able to resume normal service to Europe. Theres two things here: the wind and the other is the volcano, he said. They both need to change before we can get going again. Nervous investors have begun selling their shares of several major European airlines for fear that the financial fallout from the volcanic eruptionestimated by some to be upward of US$1 billion when its all overcould push an industry already grappling with a global economic downturn to the edge.
Predicting how long it will take for the volcanic activity to subside is notoriously difficult. It could be a few days, weeks or even longer. The last eruption at Eyjafjallajökull, in 1821, carried on in fits and starts for more than a year. The bad news for airlines is that the volcano lies near the path of one of the worlds busiest flying routes, the transatlantic corridor between Europe and North America. Even sporadic, small eruptions over an extended period could wreak havoc with airline schedules.
While it may be difficult for frustrated travellers to grasp the dangerthe menacing cloud shows up in the sky mostly in the form of vivid sunsetsthere are good reasons for being cautious. In 1982, a British Airways flight en route to Australia flew into a cloud of volcanic ash over Indonesia. The pilots had no idea what had happened as sparks began to fly off the aircrafts leading edges. Then the Boeing 747s engines began to cut out one-by-one over the ocean, turning the mammoth machine into a gradually falling object. Thats when Captain Eric Moody used the planes public address system to try and calmly inform the 263 passengers of Flight 009 of the terrifying circumstances. Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get it under control. I trust you are not in too much distress. Fortunately for everyone on board, Moody put the plane into a nosedive in a bid to compensate for the falling pressure in the planes cabin. By doing so, he pushed the jumbo jet down into the heavier air of the lower atmosphere and unwittingly helped to purge the engines of the clogging ash. The plane later made an emergency landing. A similar incident occurred in 1989 when a KLM flight en route to Anchorage flew into a cloud of ash that was spewed in the air during an eruption of Alaskas Mount Redoubt. The 747 also managed to restart its engines and land safely.
That was my point for saying, "Got Milk."
Informed people will make a bee-line to the supermarkets the minute they hear that Katla has blown...this will cause a worldwide food panic, like we've never seen.
(I will buy some (more) storeable food supplies tonight and beat the rush, ahem)
That ice-water theory is based on a HUGE release(s) during the end of the last(?) ice age. A fresh-water lake sitting where the Great Lakes are now was created from an ice dam. The dam breaks, and all of the water goes rushing into the ocean.
My globe is buried, but I imagine the size of the lake was several times the size of Iceland.
Where do you think this ice is?
I can do without summer here in Texas with the temps in the triple digits.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. “
Well, that qualifies AT LEAST as a small problem.
"Evidence of glacial Lake Agassiz occurs over an area of roughly 365,000 square miles, an area five times the size of the state of North Dakota..."
Bigger and easier targets for Muslim terrorists, eh?
The Deleware River.
Given the jet & gulf streams; Europe will get hit with cold first.
" Eyjafjallajökull could have a severe impact on UK food imports, with foreign fruit and vegetables like pineapple and baby sweet corn already seeing shortages, according to The Guardian."
"Other produce under threat includes lettuce, grapes, and asparagus."
What effect on prices?
It's a better chance we'll reroute them to South America, and maybe even Mexico.
I doubt the natives there are any better prepared now than they were way back when!
French president says his country smells like ash.
Thanks - I spelled the name wrong in my search and was having a heck of a time!
One site had Lake Agassiz with a volume of about 157,000 cubic kilometers of water. (I think it was Agassiz, but there were several different ice age dam bursts at different times).
The largest glacier in Iceland is 8,167 sq. km in size, and maximum thickness of 1,000 meters. So only 8,167 km-cubed of ice. (And even less volume once it is melted).
But, this could be the start of a very bad cold spell. And if you are of the belief of a cyclical nature to the earth, we are past due for a true ice age anyway.
Ooooo, that’s a beautiful sight.
>Looks like theyll be skating on the Thames next winter.<
.
Aw shucks, I just had to replace a whole bunch of 14-year old tropical shrubs that died because of the past cold winter in Texas. Perhaps I should start getting my plants from Yankeeland.
Global warming, my *ss!
The Vikings could re-appear, eh?
I don't think "Mac" can be talked into cleaning anything.
HaHa, that would go with what Glenn Beck said once - this is G-d saying, “Hey, I got your global warming right here.” LOL
Last time (1812) it covered Europe for two years ....
“In 1982, a British Airways flight en route to Australia flew into a cloud of volcanic ash over Indonesia. The pilots had no idea what had happened as sparks began to fly off the aircrafts leading edges. Then the Boeing 747s engines began to cut out one-by-one over the ocean, turning the mammoth machine into a gradually falling object. Thats when Captain Eric Moody used the planes public address system to try and calmly inform the 263 passengers of Flight 009 of the terrifying circumstances. Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get it under control. I trust you are not in too much distress. Fortunately for everyone on board, Moody put the plane into a nosedive in a bid to compensate for the falling pressure in the planes cabin. By doing so, he pushed the jumbo jet down into the heavier air of the lower atmosphere and unwittingly helped to purge the engines of the clogging ash. The plane later made an emergency landing. A similar incident occurred in 1989 when a KLM flight en route to Anchorage flew into a cloud of ash that was spewed in the air during an eruption of Alaskas Mount Redoubt. The 747 also managed to restart its engines and land safely.”
Good thing these two instances were with Boeing 747’s and not Airbus’s!
Good point. Didn’t this happen when Mt. St. Helens erupted? I can’t remember but I do remember two summers that were no summers at all.
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