I've been looking for an excuse to get the name Eyjafjallajokull into an article, and now I finally have something special to say about the mighty Icelandic volcano that has wreaked havoc with ...
The eruptions of Iceland's volcano Eyjafjallajokull in 2010 were apparently triggered by a chain reaction of expanding magma chambers that descended into the Earth, a group of researchers now says.
It was Anzac weekend last year that Australians learned that the World Health Organisation was on high alert after a new influenza virus killed scores in Mexico raising concerns of a global epidemic.
In March 2010 Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland exploded into life, spewing lava, magma, rock and clouds of ash into the sky above it. The disaster grounded airlines, stranding holidaymakers and ...
Here is a by-the-numbers look at how businesses, travellers and Iceland have been affected as stalled travel in Europe slowly resumes: By the end of the day Tuesday, Eurocontrol expects that 95,000 ...
Thousands of flights canceled across Europe. Tens of thousands of air travelers who can't get where they want to go. A plume of ash spreading across thousands of miles. There's certainly more than ...
Though impressive, the eruption is not on the same scale as Pinatubo Watching the enormous plumes of dust and ash rising from Eyjafjallajokull, it is hard to imagine that this almost week-long ...
To gauge Eyjafjallajokull's global impact, researchers studied the worldwide air transportation network before and after 27 major European airports were closed. They found mobility patterns in places ...
With clear blue skies and a small cloud rising up to the heavens, Iceland's Eyjafjallajokull volcano looks a picture of calm today compared with 48 hours earlier. Back then, with fire and 1,250C lava ...
Not many trips can still be described as true, once-in-a-lifetime adventures but travellers who have signed up to visit the Fimmvörðuháls volcano on the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, which dramatically ...