Spectators have moved together on Thursday to the area of a new volcanic explosion about 40 km from Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland.
The volcanic eruption started on Wednesday in a volcanic crack in an uninhabited valley. It was just under a kilometre from the Mount Fagradalsfjall volcano in southwest Iceland, which erupted for six months last year.
The proper location of the eruption, in an area that is hard to reach and requires almost a 90-minute walk, has attracted more than 1,830 visitors on the first day of the appearance of the fissure, as per the Icelandic authorities.
Viewers were still rushing to the spot to witness the eruption on Thursday. The authorities have made a call on Wednesday to people to not to go to the area before a risk assessment was carried out. But, on Thursday, civil protection said only young children had to stay away from it.
Gases emanating from volcanic eruptions, especially sulphur dioxide, can be dangerous or even fatal.
Last year, the site of the eruption, easily accessible on foot, had attracted more than 435,000 tourists.
The Meteorological Institute of Iceland estimated the length of the crack at 360 meters on Thursday, with lava jets reaching around 10 to 15 metres high. The flow of lava in the early hours of the eruption was estimated at 32 cubic meters per second, according to measurements by scientists from the Institute of Earth Sciences on Wednesday, three and a half hours after the beginning of the eruption.
According to the Institute, lava from the new eruption covered an area of about 74,000 square metres.
Iceland has 32 volcanic systems considered active, the most in Europe.
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