Icelandic police said Monday that residents of a fishing village evacuated because of multiple volcanic eruptions were allowed to return, adding that they believed few would stay overnight because of the state of the town.
Residents Free to Return to Iceland Village Evacuated by Volcano Eruptions
Icelandic police said Monday that residents of a fishing village evacuated because of multiple volcanic eruptions were allowed to return, adding that they believed few would stay overnight because of the state of the town.
The roughly 4,000 residents of Grindavik on the Reykjanes peninsula in southwest Iceland had to be evacuated on Nov. 11 after hundreds of earthquakes damaged buildings and opened up huge cracks in roads, shrouding the village’s future in doubt.
The quakes were followed by a volcanic fissure on Dec. 18 that spared the village, but a second on Jan. 14 opened right on the town’s edge, sending orange lava flowing into the streets and reducing three homes to ashes.
On Feb. 8 a third eruption near the village started, sending an estimated 15 million cubic meters of lava flowing out in the first seven hours.


















































