Water and Lava, but — Curiously — No Explosion

Land-based lava pillars in Iceland may have formed through an unusual reaction typically seen deep under the sea.

Written byUniversity at Buffalo
| 3 min read
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BUFFALO, N.Y. — Rocky pillars dotting Iceland’s Skaelingar valley were projectiles tossed into the fields by warring trolls.

That, at least, is the tale that University at Buffalo geologist Tracy Gregg heard from a tour guide and local hiker when she visited the site on two occasions.

But Gregg and a colleague have a new explanation for the presence of the lava formations — this one also unexpected.

In the Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, she and former UB master’s student Kenneth Christle report that the pillars, hollow and made from basalt, likely formed in a surprising reaction where lava met water without any explosion occurring.

Their findings appeared online Aug. 15 and will be published in a forthcoming print edition of the journal.

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