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All Iceland Snæfellsjökull

Snæfellsjökull

A formerly glacier-tipped volcano that inspired none other than Jules Verne.

Iceland

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Cristina Urdiales
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Snæfellsjökull under clouds.   benjaminleephoto.com
Snæfellsjökull   Nacho Pintos on Flickr
The dwindling glacial snow on the top of the mountain.   Nacho Pintos on Flickr
Snæfellsjökull   Dominikus / Atlas Obscura User
Snæfellsjökull reflection.   erinculley / Atlas Obscura User
  erinculley / Atlas Obscura User
  erinculley / Atlas Obscura User
Ice climbing in July on Snaefellsjokull.   emmen / Atlas Obscura User
Sod house at the foot of Snæfellsjökull   hzoi / Atlas Obscura User
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About

120 kilometers northeast of Reykjavik lies Snæfellsjökull, a 700,000 year old volcano whose glacier-topped peak inspired Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth.  

Composed of layered lava, ash and other volcanic elements, the caustic mountain has preserved its conic shape despite having been largely dormant since around 200 CE. Unlike most volcanoes which harbor a steaming caldera at their apex, Snæfellsjökull's top has traditionally been covered by a glacier. Indeed, the mountain's very name translates to "Snæfells glacier." Unfortunately due to rising temperatures in the area, 2012 marked the first year in recorded history that the summit of the mountain was completely free of ice. The whole area is full of amazing lava formations and caves, and there are organized trips to the summit, 1448 meters above the surrounding rocky plains.

Snæfellsjökull has long been one of Iceland's most famous natural wonders and was even cited as the entrance to the wondrous Earth's core in Jules Verne's 1864 book A Journey to the Center of the Earth. The adventurers in the novel use the Stromboli volcano as their exit from the fantasy land, but their entrance to the underworld remains one of Iceland's most awesome features.

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Volcanoes Literature Geology
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crisurdiales

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emmen, aribrown, EricGrundhauser, hzoi...

  • emmen
  • aribrown
  • EricGrundhauser
  • hzoi
  • erinculley
  • Dominikus

Published

December 15, 2012

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Sources
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%A6fellsj%C3%B6kull
  • http://www.west.is/SeeDo/SnaefellsjokullNationalPark/
  • http://www.planiceland.com/Snaefellsjokull-Glacier/
Snæfellsjökull
Snæfellsjökull National Park
Iceland
64.907222, -23.922222

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