But I was also monitoring the location of all the earthquakes in the Katla region. As I did so I noticed that the initially rather random pattern of these quakes was beginning to focus around a number of different spots. Since there are about half-a-dozen of these quakes a day the plots can lose clarity after a while, and so last month I started putting the quakes into ten-day segments of different colors. This month I am going to try putting them on different layers in Photoshop as well, so that I can separate out the different phases and carry them forward as a running total. So this is the pattern for June.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMWJfVuB4SdFYSO4nA638xr6CwJRWzNT9tgcog_8Zdr1Ie3KLwZp1aiM-wDyJvTBDX4q2SHUvDcLWFdfmhRdkxy1uIJ5AIwejt3ColrfANRT98LjtgG0d7N58WNuxeHUzcpWdhuhVo4Ts/s320/6c+Myrdalsjokull+June+2011+trunc.png)
You will notice that the “focusing” of the quake activity has continued to reduce the overall area in which they are occurring. In addition over at the Iceland Volcano and Earthquake blog reports are appearing of harmonic signal development possibly suggesting the movement of magma under Katla.
I’ll continue to post these at intermittent intervals until there is an eruption, or the focus dissipates.
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