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Jaw dropping moment Icelandic volcano erupts shooting lava into night sky and carving fiery fissure 4km long into the earth

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This is the moment an Icelandic volcano erupted after magma built up under the surface of the earth for weeks. 

The eruption at the Sundhjuka crater, on the Reykjanes peninsula, began lighting up the night sky at 10.17pm tonight, after a series of earthquakes hit the area.

Video footage of the moment of the eruption showed Iceland's black night sky lit up a deep orange colour as molten rock flew into the air. 

The camera, run by Icelandic broadcasters, zoomed into the point of eruption, understood to be less than two miles away from the world-famous Blue Lagoon, and showed molten rock spurting high out of the ground. 

A massive fissure of lava is currently three kilometres long is carving through the Reykjanes peninsula, following the eruption. 

The eruption at the Sundhjuka crater, on the Reykjanes peninsula, began lighting up the night sky at 10.17pm tonight

Video footage of the moment of the eruption showed Iceland's black night sky lit up a deep orange colour as molten rock flew into the air

A massive fissure of lava is currently three kilometres long is carving through the Reykjanes peninsula, following the eruption

Fearing a significant outbreak on the Reykjanes peninsula, authorities last month evacuated the nearly 4,000 inhabitants of the fishing town of Grindavik

Fearing a significant outbreak on the Reykjanes peninsula, authorities last month evacuated the nearly 4,000 inhabitants of the fishing town of Grindavik and closed the nearby Blue Lagoon geothermal spa.

Iceland's Met Office warned on their website that an 'eruption has started north of Grindavik by Hagafall'.

Speaking following the eruption, Fannar Jónasson, mayor of Grindavik, said Icelandic news service Visi: 'I'm just, like others, trying to get information. But this seems like quite an explosion in the early stages. But you don't know anything yet. It's going to be a long night.'  

He added that a few hundred meters can make all the difference, no matter in which direction the lava flows.

Also speaking to Visi as the blast began, volcanologist Þorvald Þórðarson admitted the eruption was the worst-case scenario.

He explained: 'We were talking about two scenarios a few days ago, one of which was that everything was going to relax and die out, you were hoping that was what was going on.

Pictures on social media show the sky being tinted red by the lava spurts

'The other is that this stretch of the crust above the intrusion would have reached its tolerance limit and that it would start to erupt. This is what we feared the most.'

Iceland Police said in a statement: 'An eruption has begun. We ask people not to be in front of the responders and not to go in the direction of the eruption. It is important that roads and other things are as accessible as possible.'

Reykjavik's international airport, which is located nearby, remained open. 'At the moment, there are no disruptions to arrivals or departures at Keflavik Airport,' it said on its website.

Jake Deakin, 26, a marketing manager from Manchester, is currently stranded on the tarmac after his flight back to the UK was delayed.

He booked a short stay for his girlfriends birthday a few months ago after the couple had talked about how they wanted to go to Iceland together.

But, he said, he and his girlfriend got more than they bargained for with what was meant to be a relaxing weekend away.

Pictures from surveillance cameras covering the volcano show lava spurts

Jake Deakin, 26, a marketing manager from Manchester, is currently stranded on the tarmac after his flight back to the UK was delayed. From his plane window he watched lava spurts light up the sky in the distance (pictured)

'We were at the blue lagoon four hours ago! They said it had calmed down, and with the blue lagoon opening again you'd think things had calmed down.'

The plane had been sat on the tarmac being de-iced when Jake and other passengers noticed an orange glow out the window.

'We noticed it then the crew mentioned it after a few others had seen it. I saw a post on twitter which confirmed then told others. We're all ok, it's obviously stressful but still sat on the plane at the gate.'

He said passengers are 'Waiting for further updates at the moment… The latest update was there's no update!'

He said they would have missed the eruption had the flight taken off on time. Sharing pictures of his view from the plane, Jake said the fissure is 'definitely getting wider'.

On its website, the Met Office said the volcano eruption started at 10.17pm following an 'earthquake swarm' at 9pm.

Pictured: A police officer inspects a crack in the road in the fishing town of Grindavik, November 15

The port Of Grindavik braced itself for what could be an eruption of the nearby Fagradalsfjall volcano or one of the fissures which have opened up in the area. Pictured: Crack across one of its main roads

A drone captured pictures of what appear to be fissures in the ground on the Reykjanes Peninsula, near Grindavik, in November

Eyjafjallajokull erupting in 2010 (pictured) produced a huge cloud of ash that prompted the biggest global aviation shutdown since World War II, with 50,000 flights cancelled and 8million passengers affected

This comes after the volcano was hit by more than 1,000 earthquakes in just 24 hours on November 9, igniting fears of an imminent eruption.

Geophysicist Benedikt Ofeigsson said in November that there were clear signs that huge magma corridor under the Reykjanes Peninsula was expanding.

The area around the Fagradalsfjall had braced itself for an eruption after huge chasms ripping apart homes and roads in Grindavik.

On November 16, magmatic gas was detected at a borehole in Svartsengi - 2.3 miles north of Grindavik - which experts said was a signal that an eruption is imminent.

An eruption of molten rock from the magma tunnel beneath Reykjanes was the most likely scenario following weeks of seismic activity, the head of the volcano department at the weather service Kristin Jonsdottir told RUV radio station last month.

Monitoring indicated that a corridor of magma, or semi-molten rock, extends under the community, Iceland's Meteorological Office said. The town of 3,400 is about 31 miles southwest of the capital, Reykjavik.

Volcanologist Haraldur Sigurðsson previously said that if an eruption were to happen, he expects that it could erupt into the sea and says Grindavik needs to be 'reorganised' in order to mitigate the disk of future widespread destruction.

'I'm also worried about the port. It doesn't take much to destroy this port, fill it with lava,' Haraldur told Iceland's Morgunblaðið (MBL) newspaper.

'There are both cracks there in the harbour and even if the magma comes up somewhere outside, it flows into the harbour, because this is the depression.

'So, in the big picture, this town needs to be completely reorganised,' he added.

Asked by MBL's reporter if he envisages a future in which the people of Grindavik can return to their homes, he said: 'What didn't people do in Vestmannaeyjar (a town hit by an eruption in 1973)? I think the town should be reorganised.'

The peninsula in recent years saw several eruptions in unpopulated areas, but the current outbreak was believed to pose an immediate risk to the town, authorities have said.

Reykjanes is a volcanic and seismic hot-spot southwest of the capital Reykjavik. In March 2021, lava fountains erupted spectacularly from a 500-750-metre-long (1,640-2,460-foot-long) fissure in the ground in the Fagradalsfjall volcanic system.

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