The floor is Q-LavHA A study about Hafnarfjörður and the rising volcanic activity on the Reykjanes peninsula, Iceland
Abstract
The 2021 eruption in Fagradalsfjall might have activated a new era of volcanic activity on the
Reykjanes peninsula. To study possible eruptions and its impact, one way of simulating lava
flow using QGIS is through the plugin Q-LavHA. To validate the method, a reference flow
from Fagradalsfjall was digitized and showed accuracy when simulating a new flow with
parameters in Manhattan Length, lining up with the reference flow. Manhattan Length is a QLavHA
parameter for simulating a lava flow line following the travel distance. This validates
the method of the plugin enough to line up with the original flow from Fagradalsfjall. The same
parameters for Fagradalsfjall were then used on a fissure south of Hafnarfjörður, to simulate a
potential lava flow. However, it does have a different topography than Fagradalsfjall and could
therefore mean a different outcome.
The method after simulating a possible flow in Hafnarfjörður from the reference flow in
Fagradalsfjall was to simulate a “worst-case scenario” using the plugin but changing and using
FLOWGO as a parameter. This was simulated with a flow similar to water, to get a longer
extent that reaches Hafnarfjörður to analyze how the town could be affected and the possible
lava flow pathway. This was done on both Fagradalsfjall and Hafnarfjörður, to see how the
plugin would use the new parameters in FLOWGO compared to each other. It did show a longer
extent and that the topography has an important role in the simulated flow, as Hafnarfjörður is
flat while Fagradalsfjall has a variety of heights. The worst-case scenario flow on Fagradalsfjall
did not reach the nearest town Grindavík, according to Q-LavHA, while the worst-case scenario
for Hafnarfjörður reached the town.
The next step was to change topography using the previous flow and add it to the Digital
Elevation Model (DEM), then simulate a new flow and a worst-case scenario flow on top of
that near Hafnarfjörður. This was also done for Fagradalsfjall but with the new DEM with
changed topography already added from the real outbreak. The last step was to visualize a
barrier to see that the plugin could stop the flow at a certain barrier height. This resulted in
barriers reaching heights of 30-40 m for the lava flow to stop, and a relatively long barrier.
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Date
2022-06-30Author
Derenius, Rebecca
Gao, Josie
Keywords
Q-LavHA
volcanic activity
lava flow pathway
Iceland
Hafnarfjörður
Fagradalsfjall
Series/Report no.
B1193
Language
eng