![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgywlegPOjDuZ8_ZE3PTqSsIOTDOKd4iuz9493SZ4uJhQbVritjZXQkVXBSYxsxG5BKMNeikdHkH_wDzqt-usVN2zHxqAmJNPf2i7f5TSriWXDHWl44Z_j76A1gudFm5TseGhYoRatpsNXr/s320/1+Katla+15+Nov+2011.png)
UPDATE: The Icelandic Met Office has another page, which shows the quake map in a different mode, and also gives the frequency over the past day. It currently shows an interesting pattern for the quakes of the last 24 hours.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfYCgRUgeBWNK8oMqnG3dkuC4A4xtoSRKFfiirRexWMAbEGIxgLQFIWNcB974zF3eC9K3ZBsmg9i1Ty0InRSbqp_Eva69cqpgJK7aP40uZfswOejrSrWEDAUPXMOLzW36pMqghTjsklQ3v/s320/2+Katla+15+Nov+2011.png)
Note the site also shows the corrected size of the earthquakes, while the earlier site gives an automated assessment. and, as an update, there are consequent tremors that are falling along the same boundary.
The larger earthquakes are also increasing in size, these two being a 3.8 and then a 3.3, occurring about 3 km apart, which with the intervening activity (the red dots) which included a 2.4 suggests that there just might be a fissure opening. (The now corrected values are given in the lower figure).
Three days ago Jón Frímann noticed signs from his geophones indicating that a new dike had intruded into the caldera. The current activity is a little north of that event, it is also very shallow, with the first and larger quake being at 2.5 km depth while the subsequent ones are down around 1.1 km.
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