![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgECUFFShx2Ch9QmH6O1o00Lu82rGkuTSBJDTQcXtBdDh9VDXfacimZg2AYnq7y9pV2nebZOPSkeht8sMoojbYyciVcq2gdF3-2yd1wjj5IWNBRFASykwgkB4Wk-zeLrpcB12GGXaeiAaMT/s320/1+Katla+Oct+4+2011.png)
UPDATE: And just as I finish the post on Western US temperatures, and check with Katla, the activity seems to be picking up even more with a 3.9 earthquake sitting on top of the earlier 3.3 (you can see it as a yellow star in the background). But there is also a considerable amount more activity in the caldera, which has to be worrying.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWAX1qa036IPNf8EPOr-QwkjLUcsKSn6VVWjsBwG70xIVEtqy87Rtyo7XwOS0rXx_A07WRUpT2M1HT1h2kMvP5aRyMTw2CroS1xBS21oUuDwPnjN1R1DN70Yqc6xYeGavquLGYC69dQ7iL/s320/1A+Katla+5+Oct.png)
Jon is posting some of the seismic information on the quakes at the Iceland Volcano and Earthquake site, and the Icelandic Met Office has now issued a statement which also shows the unusual nature of the current activity, in that it includes a number of earthquakes above a level 3, and that the activity still appears to be increasing. A more distributed graph of the recent activity can be found here.
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