Fjallsarlon, Vatnajokull Ice Cap, Iceland
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Description:
Mighty and steep glaciers that adorn the eastern slopes of the Oraefajokull volcano, including Hrutar-and Fjallsjokull. The elevation difference of 2,000 metres from the top edge almost to sea level exceeds alpine proportions. They receed as most Icelandic glaciers have done during the past two decades or so. This was also the case in the period between approx. 1920 and 1970. The Fjallsjokull glacier now slides into a substantial lake in front of its steep margins, called Fjallsarlon. It is, however, much smaller than its neighbour, the grand Jokulsarlon. Ice calves from high ice cliffs. The lagoon is visited less than Jokulsarlon but worth every minute spent there. Higher resolution images available from rth@arctic-images.com (there is a licensing fee depending on the use).
Credit:
Ragnar Sigurdsson/Arctic-Images.com
- Iceland
Other images by this photographer (53 images)
When:
Submitted on Ιανουάριος 10, 2010
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- Volcanology, Mineralogy, Geomaterials, Geochemistry, Magnetism (144 images)
- Cryospheric Sciences (111 images)
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- Field (785 images)