Just few days ago we all got surprised by the Iceland’s disruptive volcano. I’m sure some of you knows about it better than me, it’s all over the news, the internet and the newspaper. This is why I’d like to collect some informations from sites that I found this morning, just to share it with you and may it will ease the information distributions around the net world.

Here are those sites I googled and I found it so interesting despite of the disruptive it may caused to Europian’s countries.

> This site shared us the collection of the big pictures of the most recent eruption, and of last month’s eruptions, which were from the same volcano, just several miles further east.

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/0/icelands_disruptive_volcano.html

On April 15, 2010 British civil aviation authorities ordered the country’s airspace closed as of noon, due to a cloud of ash drifting from the erupting Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland. The volcano has erupted for the second time in less than a month, melting ice, shooting smoke and steam into the air and forcing hundreds of people to flee rising floodwaters. The volcanic ash has forced the cancellation of many flights and disrupted air traffic across northern Europe, stranding thousands of passengers. Collected here are photos of the most recent eruption, and of last month’s eruptions, which were from the same volcano, just several miles further east. (18 photos total)

Smoke billows from an erupting volcano which seems to be close to the top of the Eyjafjalla glacier on April 14, 2010 near Reykjavik. All London flights, including those from Heathrow, will be suspended from noon (1100 GMT) today due to volcanic ash from Iceland that has already caused almost 300 cancellations here, officials said. (AFP/Getty Images)

Tourists gather to watch lava spurt out of the site of a volcanic eruption at the Eyjafjallajökull volcano on March 27, 2010. Up to 800 people were evacuated in Iceland early on April 14, 2010 due to a volcano eruption under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier in the south of the island, police and geophysicists said. (HALLDOR KOLBEINS/AFP/Getty Images) #

(See more 18 big photos..)

> It’s when Tourists trapped at NY airport waiting for word on Icelandic ash.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-04/18/c_13256534.htm

NEW YORK, April 17 (Xinhua) — Hundreds of tourists from different European countries were waiting impatiently Saturday for word on the ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano that had kept them stranded at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport. Terminal 4 of the airport was filled with would-be passengers from Ireland, Germany, Britain and France as the volcanic cloud continued to wreak havoc on air traffic around the world. (read more..)

Passengers wait at the New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, on April 17, 2010. Hundreds of tourists from different European countries were waiting here Saturday for word on the ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano. Up to 84 percent of U.S. flights to Europe remain canceled Saturday as ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano continues to blow across the continent. (Xinhua/Wang Chengyun)

Passengers wait at the Tegel Airport in Berlin, Germany, April 17, 2010. German airspace will be closed until 8:00 am Sunday because of a cloud of volcanic ash from Iceland expanding over Europe. (Xinhua/Luo Huanhuan)

> Last but not least..Despite of all the disruptive volcano, there was an amazing phenomenon that came out of it. An Aurora seen in Volcano eruption on April 16, 2010.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/photo/2010-04/18/c_13256531.htm

This photo shows the Iceland volcano erupts while auroras are visible overhead on April 16. (Photo: CFP)

©nationalpictures.co.uk/ Albert Jakobsson/NATIONAL PICTURES/MAXPPP -

To capture stunning pictures of an erupting volcano would be enough for most photographers.

But one lucky snapper also got the northern lights thrown in as well.

As a blanket of ash grounds planes across Europe, these pictures show the beauty of the volcanic eruption in Iceland.

Albert Jakobsson had set out for the  Fimmvorduhals volcano near the Eyjafjallajokull glacier some 125 kilometers east of Reykjakik in temperatures of minus 20 to see the stunning eruption.

He walked across the glacier to get to a good spot and started snapping away.

He was literally just packing up, when suddenly the aurora borealis appeared.


The first thing I said when I saw that Aurora picture was “Subhanallah..”. I always believe there’s always a goodness came out of the bad..

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