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The nature in Iceland is the main reason for most tourists to visit Iceland.

The tectonical plate boundaries go through Iceland making the country very volcanically active and the geology diverse.

Glaciers cover over 10% of Iceland and the Vatnajokull ice cap is Europe´s largest glacier.

Wildlife consists mostly on birds although the Icelandic waters are rich of marine mammals, such as whales and seals.

The Northern Lights are also a natural phenomenon often seen in Iceland.

Top : Iceland nature : Glaciers in Iceland : Myrdalsjokull Glacier

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Vatnajökull
Mýrdalsjökull
Tindfjallajökull
Langjökull
Eyjafjallajökull

Myrdalsjokull Glacier

Mýrdalsjökull is the southernmost glacier in Iceland and is is the fourth largest glacier with an area of about 590 km².  It covers the upper part of a large volcano, the Katla caldera.  Katla and its caldera is estimated to have a diameter of about 10 km and the highest point is almost 1500 m.a.s.l. Katla is oval in shape with the longest axis NW-SE and covers an area 110 km2.  The  highest points of the ice cap lie on the caldera rim and include Goðabunga, Háabunga, Austmannsbunga, Enta, Entukollar. Within the caldera the ice is hundreds of meters thick. Eruptions can start in many places outside or within the caldera and cause great glacier bursts. Quite a few glacier snouts flow down onto the lower lying areas and discharge a great volume of water. 

Iceland's fourth largest glacier

During the summer of 1999 some activity was noted within the   Mýrdalsjökull caldera.  On the night of the 18th  July came a sudden flood in  the river Jökulsá á Sólheimasandi.  The source of the flood was meltwater from a depression formed simultaneously in the glacier surface, within the ice drainage basin of Sólheimajökull. After the flood existing depressions enlarged and crevasses were formed.  The depressions became deeper during the summer and increased in number.  The reason was increased geothermal activity.  It is possible that there was a small eruption at the head of Sólheimajökull that formed a depression and caused the flood.

Katla erupted very powerfully in 1918 but there are evidence of smaller eruptions after that. Icelandic volcanologists are expecting another eruption in next few years so the Myrdalsjokull glacier and the Katla caldera are monitored quite closely. Just west of Myrdalsjokull glacier is another glacier, Eyjafjallajokull which is much smaller (50 km²).

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