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Krafla is a caldera of about 10 km in diameter with a 90 km long fissure zone, in the north of Iceland in the Mývatn region. Its highest peak reaches up to 818 m. Krafla includes one of the two best known Víti craters of Iceland, the second is part of Askja. The Icelandic word "víti" means "hell". In former times, people often believed Hell to be under volcanoes. The crater Víti has a green lake inside of it. The Krafla area also includes Námafjall, a geothermal area with boiling mudpools and steaming fumaroles. During the years 1724-29, there were the so-called Mývatn fires. A lot of fissure vents opened up and the lava fountains could be seen even in the south of the island. A lava flow destroyed 3 farms near the village Reykjahlíð, but nobody was harmed. The last volcanic eruption at Krafla took place in 1984. Since 1977 the geothermal energy has been put to use by means of a 60 MW power station. It has erupted 29 times and it is 2km in depth

Tags: Krafla volcano Mývatn Myvatn lava fields Námafjall fumaroles boiling mudpools
Krisuvik hot sulphur springs, volcanoes, Iceland, 2002. The geothermal area Krýsuvík is situated on the Reykjanes peninsula in Iceland. It is in the south of Reykjanes in the middle of the fissure zone on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge which traverses Iceland diagonally from the south-west to the north-east of the island. Krýsuvík is one of Iceland's high temperature areas. This becomes visible through the sulphur springs and hot springs at Seltún and another similar area nearby. At Seltún, one finds by now some explanations to the phenomena to see, a wooden show path and hiking trails leading up the mountain Sveifluháls behind. The biggest lake in the area, Kleifarvatn, began to diminish after a big earthquake in 2000; 20% of its surface has since disappeared. Some of the minor lakes show also the influence of volcanism, so for example Grænavatn with its luminous green colour. In this area, there had been some farms till the 19th century. But they had to be given up. Only a small chapel, Krísuvíkurkirkja built in 1857, remains and can be visited.

Tags: Iceland volcano volcanoes Krisuvik hot springs Reykjanes
Just by the way of my private trip to Rotorua today...

Tags: volcanic fumarole maori destination landmark nature travel log
des fumeurs noir de la fosse des marianne, vision globale de la faune locale.

Tags: fumeur noir fosse marianne riftia crabe
The Peitou fumaroles were on good form when I passed by them recently--feeding all those hot spring spas nearby

Tags: Taiwan travel Peitou Beitou fumarole fumaroles Taipei City volcano volcanic
#3 in the VEC's 'Aimless Gardening' series

Tags: Performing Arts Visual Poetry Iceland
Fumaroles am Kraterrand des Teide auf Teneriffa

Tags: fumaroles vulkan vulcano tenerife teneriffa teide
Steam escaping from volcanic fumaroles in Furnas Crater on the Azorean Island of Sao Miguel.

Tags: furnas azores acores 'sao miguel' volcano fumaroles 'hot spring' steam
High wind at Colima's volcanic summit blasts fumarole emissions westward. Panorama of the summit crater and growing lava dome.

Tags: Colima volcano fumaroles dome
Fumaroles at Fountain Paint Pot on Lower Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park. The hiss and roar of a fumarole comes from gases - steam, carbon dioxide, and a little hydrogen sulfide - rushing from the earth through the vent. Its channel system reaches down into the hot rock masses, but it contains very little water. When water contacts the hot rock, it flashes into steam. Its volume increases 1,500 times and drives the gases from the vent.

Tags: Fumaroles Fountain Paint Pot Lower Geyser Basin Yellowstone National Park
These steam vents at Yellowstone Lake are actually called fumaroles.

Tags: TOFUGIRL1 fumaroles
I don't know if that's the right word, but needed to put something in.

Tags: volcano
fumaroles, Fountain Paint Pot - September 21, 2006 11:00am

Tags: yellowstone fumaroles fountain paint pots
More vid from Mount Lassen.

Tags: volcano
Muddy 'Fuming' Geysers, Yellowstone

Tags: Fumarole geyser Yellowstone
Kawah Ijen is an active volcano in East Java, Indonesia. At the bottom of the volcano's crater is a lake with high concentrations of sulfuric and hydrochloric acid. Also at the bottom are active sulfur fumaroles where molten sulfur (as well as SO2 and H2S gases) erupt to the surface. Workers tap into the fumaroles with pipes which condense the sulfur fumes into molten sulfur. The molten sulfur is transported down the face of the sulfur dome to collection areas where it cools into a solid. Workers break up the sulfur and carry out the chunks in baskets. The usual load is around 80 kgs (175 pounds) and earns the worker about 5 US dollars per load. Most of the workers average 2-3 trips a day from the trailhead to Kawah Ijen, a one-way distance of about 3 kms (1.8 miles). This has to be one of the toughest jobs on the planet. Each man is often carrying more sulfur than he weighs. Most are wearing inadequate footwear, some are even wearing flip-flops for the treacherous descent into the crater. And while in the crater, the workers are exposed to hazardous, if not deadly amounts of poisonous gases from the fumaroles. On top of that, the lake at the bottom occasionaly 'burps' more poisonous gases, and has been known to kill all working within the crater. And you think your job was tough!

Tags: Kawah Ijen Sulfur Mining Volcanoes Fumaroles
Kawah Ijen is an active volcano in East Java, Indonesia. At the bottom of the volcano's crater is a lake with high concentrations of sulfuric and hydrochloric acid. Also at the bottom are active sulfur fumaroles where molten sulfur (as well as SO2 and H2S gases) erupt to the surface. Workers tap into the fumaroles with pipes which condense the sulfur fumes into molten sulfur. The molten sulfur is transported down the face of the sulfur dome to collection areas where it cools into a solid. Workers break up the sulfur and carry out the chunks in baskets. The usual load is around 80 kgs (175 pounds) and earns the worker about 5 US dollars per load. Most of the workers average 2-3 trips a day from the trailhead to Kawah Ijen, a one-way distance of about 3 kms (1.8 miles). This has to be one of the toughest jobs on the planet. Each man is often carrying more sulfur than he weighs. Most are wearing inadequate footwear, some are even wearing flip-flops for the treacherous descent into the crater. And while in the crater, the workers are exposed to hazardous, if not deadly amounts of poisonous gases from the fumaroles. On top of that, the lake at the bottom occasionaly 'burps' more poisonous gases, and has been known to kill all working within the crater.

Tags: Kawah Ijen Sulfur Mining Volcanos Fumaroles Indonesia East Java
The geothermal areas of Yellowstone include several geyser basins in the Yellowstone National Park as well as other geothermal features such as hot springs, mud pots and fumaroles. In total, the number of thermal features in Yellowstone is estimated at 10,000[1] and 200 to 250 geysers erupt in Yellowstone each year, making it the place with the highest concentration of active geysers in the world.[2] Many of these features build up sinter, geyserite or travertine deposits around and within them. The various geyser basins are located where rainwater and snowmelt can easily percolate into the ground, get indirectly superheated by the underlying Yellowstone hotspot, and then easily erupt at the surface as geysers, hot springs, and fumaroles. Thus flat-bottomed valleys between ancient lava flows and glacial moraines are where most of the large geothermal areas are located. Smaller geothermal areas can be found where fault lines reach the surface, in places along the circular fracture zone around the caldera and at the base of slopes that collect excess groundwater.[2] Due to high elevation of the Yellowstone Plateau, the average boiling temperature at Yellowstone's geyser basins is 199 °F (93 °C). When properly confined and close to the surface it can periodically release some of the built-up pressure in eruptions of hot water and steam that can reach up to 390 feet (120 m) into the air (see Steamboat Geyser, the world's tallest geyser).[3] Water erupting from Yellowstone's geysers is superheated above that boiling point to an average of 204 °F (95.5 °C) as it leaves the vent. The water cools significantly while airborne and is no longer scalding hot by the time it strikes the ground, nearby boardwalks, or even spectators. However, because of the high temperatures of the water in the features, it is important that spectators remain on the boardwalks and designated trails. Several deaths have occurred in the park as a result of falls into hot springs. Prehistoric Native American artifacts has been found at Mammoth Hot Springs and other geothermal areas in Yellowstone. Some accounts state that they used hot water from the geothermal features for bathing and cooking. In the 19th century, Father Pierre-Jean De Smet reported that natives he interviewed thought that geyser eruptions were "the result of combat between the infernal spirits." The Lewis and Clark Expedition traveled north of the Yellowstone area in 1806. Local natives that they came upon seldom dared to enter what we now know is the caldera because of frequent loud noises that sounded like thunder and the belief that the spirits that possessed the area did not like human intrusion into their realm.The first Caucasian known to travel into the caldera and see the geothermal features was John Colter, who had left the Lewis and Clark Expedition. He described what he saw as "hot spring brimstone." Beaver trapper Joseph Meek recounted in 1830 that the steam rising from the various geyser basins reminded him of smoke coming from industrial stacks on a cold winter morning in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In the 1850s, famed trapper Jim Bridger called it "the place where Hell bubbled up."

Tags: West Thumb Geyser Basin Yellowstone national park Wyoming
A worker sprays acidic crater lake water on a pipe to help condense molten sulfur from the sulfur fumes. Another breaks up a piece of sulfur for the journey out of he crater. Notice the red molten sulfur flowing on top of the cooled yellow sulfur. Kawah Ijen is an active volcano in East Java, Indonesia. At the bottom of the volcano's crater is a lake with high concentrations of sulfuric and hydrochloric acid. Also at the bottom are active sulfur fumaroles where molten sulfur (as well as SO2 and H2S gases) erupt to the surface. Workers tap into the fumaroles with pipes which condense the sulfur fumes into molten sulfur. The molten sulfur is transported down the face of the sulfur dome to collection areas where it cools into a solid. Workers break up the sulfur and carry out the chunks in baskets. The usual load is around 80 kgs (175 pounds) and earns the worker about 5 US dollars per load. Most of the workers average 2-3 trips a day from the trailhead to Kawah Ijen, a one-way distance of about 3 kms (1.8 miles). This has to be one of the toughest jobs on the planet. Each man is often carrying more sulfur than he weighs. Most are wearing inadequate footwear, some are even wearing flip-flops for the treacherous descent into the crater. And while in the crater, the workers are exposed to hazardous, if not deadly amounts of poisonous gases from the fumaroles. On top of that, the lake at the bottom occasionaly 'burps' more poisonous gases, and has been known to kill all working within the crater

Tags: Kawah Ijen Volcano Volcanoes Indonesia East Java Sulfur Mining
On Gunung Welirang Volcano in East Java the local people mine sulfur from active fumaroles. This video footage was shot on May 3, 2008.

Tags: Sulfur mining volcano Welirang belerang fumaroles East Java Indonesia
Just a simple video I made for my Kinship in LOTRO This fight VS. Thrang is not to hard once you understand the strategy behind it. The purpose for this video is for people that are looking how to beat thrang, or for people that are just real board. This video was made in Windows movie player, and only took 1 hour 45 min so it's nothing special. When the Shaman first come down the steps 2 mins. (one on left and one on right) hit Fellows Heart to 1 gain agro, and 2 buy time for the tanks to get agro. The tank and mins on the Left side.run to the right pocket and fakes death. Along with the Right mins. This gets all 4 Shaman to one side where 2 mins. and 2 tanks gain control. Getting control is the hard part and the most common spot to wipe. At this time the Left Mins. (in the video case it was me) returns to the left side. Take a fiew DPS classes to gain agro on one Shaman and drag it to the left pocket, then DPS it down. Agro on Thrang is gained by healing a member that was just hit my Thrang, It is very important that one of the 2 mins DO NOT come over to the left and try to help the left mins heal. That job is left to the Loremasters and Captions. Keep all members deep in the pocket to avoid fumaroles DOT Side note .. always keep wound pots. The fumaroles give a nasty DOT that will kill you if you don't remove it. Use the tanks to run over fumaroles to remove Thrangs buff after he has come down I hope this helps Michael Smith

Tags: Lotro thrang games pve balrog Lord of the rings video rift
'Discover the four types of hydrothermal features; hot springs, geysers, mudpots, fumaroles. Team Adventure was the first to capture an eruption at Silex Springs.

Tags: fountain point pot nature trail hot springs mudpots fumaroles clepsydra geysers kiva tribes
(Notice the color of the lake in this clip) Kawah Ijen is an active volcano in East Java, Indonesia. At the bottom of the volcano's crater is a lake with high concentrations of sulfuric and hydrochloric acid. Also at the bottom are active sulfur fumaroles where molten sulfur (as well as SO2 and H2S gases) erupt to the surface. Workers tap into the fumaroles with pipes which condense the sulfur fumes into molten sulfur. The molten sulfur is transported down the face of the sulfur dome to collection areas where it cools into a solid. Workers break up the sulfur and carry out the chunks in baskets. The usual load is around 80 kgs (175 pounds) and earns the worker about 5 US dollars per load. Most of the workers average 2-3 trips a day from the trailhead to Kawah Ijen, a one-way distance of about 3 kms (1.8 miles). This has to be one of the toughest jobs on the planet. Each man is often carrying more sulfur than he weighs. Most are wearing inadequate footwear, some are even wearing flip-flops for the treacherous descent into the crater. And while in the crater, the workers are exposed to hazardous, if not deadly amounts of poisonous gases from the fumaroles. On top of that, the lake at the bottom occasionaly 'burps' more poisonous gases, and has been known to kill all working within the crater

Tags: Kawah Ijen Volcano Volcanoes Crater Fumaroles Sulfur Mining East Java Indonesia
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