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Precarity (Social Christianity) and Surtsey: Difference between pages

Coordinates: 63°18′11″N 20°36′17″W / 63.303°N 20.6047°W / 63.303; -20.6047
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{{Social Christianity}}
{{Infobox World Heritage Site
:''For a sociological view of labor conditions, see [[Precarious work]]
| WHS = Surtsey
===Definition===
| Image = [[Image:Surtsey eruption 1963.jpg|thumb|center|250px|Surtsey, sixteen days after the onset of the eruption]]
'''Precarity''' is a condition of [[existence]] without [[predictability]] or [[security]], affecting [[materialism|material]] or [[psychology|psychological]] welfare. The term has been specifically applied to either intermittent work or, more generally, a confluence of intermittent work and precarious existence.
| State Party = {{ISL}}
| Type = Natural
| Criteria = ix
| ID = 1267
| Region = [[List of World Heritage Sites in Europe|Europe and North America]]
| Year = 2008
| Session = 32nd
| Extension =
| Link = http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1267
}}
'''Surtsey''' ([[Icelandic language|Icelandic]]: "[[Surtr|Surtur's]] island") is a [[volcano|volcanic]] [[island]] off the southern coast of [[Iceland]]. At
{{coord|63.303|N|20.6047|W|}} it is also the [[Extreme points of Iceland|southernmost point of Iceland]]. It was formed in a [[volcanic eruption]] which began 130&nbsp;metres (426&nbsp;ft) below [[sea level]], and reached the surface on 14 November 1963. The eruption may have started a few days earlier and lasted until 5 June 1967, when the island reached its maximum size of 2.7&nbsp;[[square kilometre|km²]] (1.0&nbsp;[[square mile|mi]]²). Since then, wind and wave erosion has seen the island steadily diminish in size: as of 2002, its surface area was 1.4&nbsp;km² (0.54&nbsp;mi²).<ref>{{citation|last=Jakobsson|first=Sveinn P.|publisher=The Surtsey Research Society|url=http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/geo_2.htm|title=Surtsey - Geology|date=[[2007-05-06]]|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>


The new island was named after the fire god [[Surtr]] from [[Norse mythology]], and was intensively studied by [[Volcanology|volcanologists]] during its creation and, since the end of the eruption, has been of great interest to [[botany|botanists]] and [[biology|biologists]] as life has gradually colonised the originally barren island. The undersea vents that produced Surtsey are part of the [[Vestmannaeyjar]] (Westmann Isles) submarine volcanic system, part of the fissure of the sea floor called the [[Mid-Atlantic Ridge]]. Vestmannaeyjar also produced the famous eruption of [[Eldfell]] on the island of [[Heimaey]] in 1973. The eruption that created Surtsey also created a few other small islands along this volcanic chain, such as [[Jólnir]] and other unnamed peaks. Most of these eroded away fairly quickly.
==Precarity in Europe==
It is a term of everyday usage as ''Precariedad'', ''Précarité'', or ''Precarietà'' in a number of European countries, where it refers to the widespread condition of temporary, flexible, contingent, casual, intermittent work in [[postindustrial]] societies, brought about by the neoliberal labor market reforms that have strengthened the right to manage and the bargaining power of employers since the late 1970s.


==Precursors to the eruption==
Precarity is a general term to describe how large parts of the population are being subjected to flexible exploitation or ''[[flexicurity|flexploitation]]'' (low pay, high blackmailability, intermittent income, etc.), and existential precariousness (high risk of social exclusion because of low incomes, welfare cuts, high cost of living, etc.) The condition of precarity is said{{citation}} to affect all of [[service sector]] labor in a narrow sense, and the whole of society in a wider sense, but particularly youth, women, and immigrants.
[[Image:Surtsey-Island.PNG|250px|thumb|right|Surtsey in southwest Iceland]]
{| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" align="centre"
|+'''Scheme of the Surtseyan eruption'''
|-
| rowspan="9"| [[Image:Surtseyan Eruption-numbers.svg|200px]]
|1: Water vapour cloud
|-
|2: Cupressoid ash
|-
|3: Crater
|-
|4: Water
|-
|5: Layers of lava and ash
|-
|6: Stratum
|-
|7: Magma conduit
|-
|8: Magma chamber
|-
|9: Dike
|}


While [[contingent labor]] has been a constant of capitalist societies since the industrial revolution, [[Michael Hardt]] and [[Antonio Negri]] have argued<ref>Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, ''Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire'', New York: Penguin Press, 2004.</ref> that the flexible labor force has now moved from the peripheral position it had under [[Fordism]] to a core position in the process of capitalist accumulation under [[Post-Fordism]], which is thought to be increasingly based on the casualized efforts of affective, creative, [[immaterial labor]]. There is scattered empirical evidence in support of this thesis, such as the growing share of non-standard employment on the overall labor force, particularly on new hires. For example, in Western Europe, between a
quarter and a third of the labor force now works under temporary and/or part-time contracts, with peaks in UK, Holland, Spain and Italy.


At 07:15 [[Greenwich Mean Time|UTC+0]] on 14 November 1963, the cook of ''Ísleifur II'', a trawler sailing off the [[Vestmannaeyjar]] [[archipelago]] south of Iceland, spotted something south-west of the boat, which turned out to be a rising column of dark smoke. The vessel went to investigate the smoke. The captain thought it might have been a boat on fire, but instead they encountered explosive eruptions giving off black columns of ash, indicating that a volcanic eruption had begun beneath the sea.<ref name="Decker">
More problematic is the fact that precarity seems to conflate two categories of workers that are at opposite ends of labor market
{{citation
segmentation in postindustrial economies: pink collars working in retail and low-end services (cleaners, janitors, etc.) under
| last = Decker
constrictive but standardized employment norms; and young talent temping for cheap in the information economy of big cities around the world: the [[creative class]] of strongly individualistic workers illustrated by managerial literature.
| first = Robert
| last2 = Decker
| first2 = Barbara
| title = Volcanoes
| publisher = Freeman
| date = 1997
| location = New York
| isbn = 0716731746 }}</ref>


Although the eruption was unexpected, there had been some indications before it began that volcanic activity was imminent. From 6–8 November, weak tremors were detected at [[Kirkjubaejarklaustur]], from an [[epicentre]] measured to be 140&nbsp;km (87&nbsp;mi) distant (approximately the distance of Surtsey), while on 12 November, a [[seismograph]] in [[Reykjavík]] recorded weak tremors for ten hours, but their location was not determined.<ref name="Sigtryggson">
It also remains to be seen whether the insider/outsider division that economists observe in European labor markets means that the young, precarious, non-voting, and non-owning outsiders have fundamentally conflicting aims with respect to older insiders, who tend to work full-time, long-term contracts, enjoy relatively high pension benefits and who command a disproportionate weight in European public opinion and political debate.
{{citation
| first = Hlynur
| last = Sigtryggsson
| last2 = Sigurðsson
| first2 = Eiríkur
| title = Earth Tremors from the Surtsey Eruption 1963-1965: a preliminary survey
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report II
| pages = 131–138
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 1966
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_II.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}</ref> Two days before the eruption began, a marine research vessel noted that the sea in the area was somewhat warmer than normal,<ref name=">{{citation
| first = Svend-Aage
| last = Malmberg
| title = The temperature effect of the Surtsey eruption: a report on the sea water
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report I
| pages = 6–9
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 1965
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_I.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}</ref> and at the same time, people in the coastal town of [[Vík]] on the mainland 80&nbsp;km (50&nbsp;mi) away had noticed a smell of [[hydrogen sulfide|hydrogen sulphide]].<ref name="Decker" />


It is likely that the eruption had begun some days before 14 November. The sea floor is 130&nbsp;metres (426&nbsp;ft) below sea level, and at this depth explosive eruptions would be quenched by the water pressure. As the eruption built up a volcano approaching sea level, the explosions could no longer be contained, and activity broke the surface.<ref name="Decker" />
===Precarity and the Antiglobalization Movement===


==Early days==
Around year 2000, the word started being used in its English usage by some [[antiglobalization]] activists (''Marches Européennes contre le chômage la précarité et les exclusions'' - European Marches against unemployment, precarity and social exclusion), and also in [[EU]] official reports on [[social welfare]]. But it was in the strikes of young part-timers at [[McDonald's]] and [[Pizza Hut]] in the winter of 2000, that the first political union network emerged in Europe explicitly devoted to fighting precarity: Stop Précarité, with links to AC!, [[CGT]], SUD, [[CNT]], [[Trotsky]]ites and other elements of the French radical left.<ref>Abdel Mabrouki, ''Génération précaire'', Le Cherche Midi, 2004.</ref>
[[Image:Surtsey eruption 2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Surtsey's ash column rises over the newly forming island]]


By 11:00 on 14 November 1963, the [[eruption column]] had reached several kilometres in height. At first the eruptions took place at three separate vents along a north-east by south-west trending [[fissure]], but by the afternoon the separate eruption columns had merged into one along the erupting fissure. Over the next week, explosions were continuous, and after just a few days the new island, formed mainly of [[scoria]], measured over 500&nbsp;metres (1640&nbsp;ft) in length and had reached a height of 45&nbsp;metres (147&nbsp;ft).<ref name="Thorarinsson I">
In 2001 Italian antiglobalization collectives and networks, as they were preparing for the [[Genoa]] counter-summit just months away,
{{citation
inaugurated in [[Milan]] a new kind of first of may, '''MAYDAY''', spelling it like the [[Mayday (distress signal)|international call for rescue]], and explicitly centering it on the street representation of the so-called "precarious generation." It employed [[carnival]]-like techniques of agitation (allegorical wagons, media subvertising, colorful actions etc.) in imitation of [[gay pride]]s and love parades of the 1990s. Italian activists meant it as a revival of the [[wobbly]] traditions of [[May Day]]{{citation}}, and consequently as a break with traditional union representation and social-democratic compromise that had allowed precarity and social insecurity to spread unchecked to reach critical levels in all of Europe, thus repeating the experience of UK and US economies with a few years' lag.
| first = Sigurður
| last = Þórarinsson
| authorlink =
| title = The Surtsey eruption: Course of events and the development of the new island
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report I
| pages = 51–55
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 1965
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_I.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>


The new island was named after the fire giant [[Surtr]] from [[Norse mythology]]. As the eruptions continued, they became concentrated at one vent along the fissure and began to build the island into a more circular shape. By 24 November, the island measured about 900&nbsp;metres by 650&nbsp;metres (2950 by 2130&nbsp;ft). The violent explosions caused by the meeting of [[lava]] and sea water meant that the island consisted of a loose pile of volcanic rock ([[scoria]]), which was eroded rapidly by north [[Atlantic]] storms during the winter. However, eruptions more than kept pace with wave erosion, and by February 1964, the island had a maximum diameter of over 1300&nbsp;metres (4265&nbsp;ft).<ref name="Decker" />
By 2003, the event had grown exponentially in size, and Catalan antiglobalization activists participated as non-neutral observers. In
2004, activists in [[Barcelona]] joined the Mayday efforts, as delegations of French Intermittents participated as guests of honor in both mayday parades. The same year saw the launch of the [[icon]] of ''San Precario'', [[patron saint]] of the struggle against precarity. The religious imagery proved very popular in [[Italy]] and elsewhere, and would colonize the mainstream mediascape in the following years{{citation}}. By virtue of all these developments, Mayday 2004 drew 80,000 young protesters from all over Italy. This attracted attention from other parts of [[Europe]].


One notable event early in the island's life was the landing of three [[France|French]] [[journalist]]s representing the [[magazine]] ''[[Paris Match]]'' on 6 December 1963. They stayed for about 15&nbsp;minutes before violent explosions encouraged them to leave. The journalists jokingly claimed French [[sovereignty]] over the island, but Iceland quickly asserted that the new island belonged to it.<ref>{{citation|last=Doutreleau|first=Vanessa|title=Surtsey, naissances d'une île|journal=Ethnologie française|publisher=Presses Universitaires de France|volume=XXXVII|issn=0046-2616|isbn=2-13-055455-5|pages=421–433|year=2006|url=http://www.cairn.info/article.php?ID_REVUE=ETHN&ID_NUMPUBLIE=ETHN_063&ID_ARTICLE=ETHN_063_0421|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}} {{fr icon}}</ref>
===San Precario===
[[Image:Sprecario.jpg|thumb|San Precario]]
February 29 is the day of San Precario, the patron saint of precarious workers. S/he was created by the [[Chainworkers]] at the [[Milan]]ese space [[Reload]] where the 2004 [[EuroMayDay]] was organised with others including the [[Critical Mass]] group. The Milan Critical Mass already had its own patron saint, [[Santa Graziella]] ([[Graziella]] is the name of a bicycle firm).


==Permanent island==
San Precario was originally convceived as a male saint (Romano, 2004). [[ChainWorkers]] then did a hoax in 2005 during the Milano Fashion Week, by using a fictive stylist who was in fact an anagram for San Precario (the Saint's first pubblic appearance was at a Sunday supermarket opening on Feb 29, 2004) called [[Serpica Naro]].


The explosive [[Phreatic eruption|phreatomagmatic]] eruptions caused by the easy access of water to the erupting vents threw rocks up to a kilometre (0.6&nbsp;mi) away from the island, and sent [[Volcanic ash|ash]] clouds as high as 10&nbsp;km (6&nbsp;mi) up into the [[Earth's atmosphere|atmosphere]]. The loose pile of unconsolidated [[tephra]] would quickly have been washed away had the supply of fresh magma dwindled, and large clouds of dust were often seen blowing away from the island during this stage of the eruption.<ref name="Decker" />
The groups claim that the name functions like a multiple user name or myth such as [[Luther Blissett]] and quote the [[Wu Ming]] collective in giving theoretical coherence, although it is mostly seen as a [[Catholic]] [[detournement]] of the concept. [http://journal.fibreculture.org/issue5/vanni_tari.html]


By early 1964, though, the continuing eruptions had built the island to such a size that sea water could no longer easily reach the vents, and the volcanic activity became much less explosive. Instead, [[lava fountain]]s and [[lava flow|flows]] became the main form of activity. These resulted in a hard cap of extremely erosion-resistant rock being laid down on top of much of the loose volcanic pile, which prevented the island being washed away rapidly. Effusive eruptions continued until 1965, by which time the island had a surface area of 2.5&nbsp;km² (1&nbsp;mi²).<ref name="Decker" />
===Precarity and EuroMayDay===


On 28 December 1963 submarine activity 2.5&nbsp;km (1.5&nbsp;mi) to the north-east of Surtsey caused the formation of a ridge 100&nbsp;m (328&nbsp;ft) high on the sea floor. This [[seamount]] was named Surtla, but never reached sea level. Eruptions at Surtla ended on 6 January 1964, and it has since been eroded from its minimum depth of 23&nbsp;m (75&nbsp;ft) to 47&nbsp;m (154&nbsp;ft) below sea level.<ref name="Norrman">
In October 2004, libertarian and syndicalist collectives from across Europe gathered at Middlesex University at "Beyond ESF" (a critical reference to the [[European Social Forum]] that was being held in London at the same time) in order to give life to a unified European May Day of precarious and migrant workers: '''EUROMAYDAY''', which involved a dozen [[Western Europe]]an cities in 2005, and about twenty in 2006, with Milan, Paris, Helsinki, Hamburg, and Sevilla among the most lively nodes. In
{{citation
2006, the mayday process was launched in [[Brussels]] on [[Good Friday]] with a few hundred activists from Belgium, France, Italy, and Germany protesting against pro-business lobbies in Europe: "no borders, no precarity: fuck the new inequality!".
| first = John
| last = Norrman
| last2 = Erlingsson
| first2 = Ulf
| title = The submarine morphology of Surtsey volcanic group
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report X
| pages = 45–56
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 1992
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_X.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>


==Eruption gradually dies down==
The [[EuroMayDay]] network has gathered several times across the EU to discuss in its assemblies common actions against precarity and
[[Image:Surtsey craters.jpg|left|thumb|250px|The eruption vents in 1999]]
mobilizations against the persecution of immigrants, and particularly the segregation of undocumented migrants in detention centers all over Europe. EuroMayDay demands the full adoption of the EU directive on temporary workers being blocked by the [[Barroso Commission]], as well as a European minimum wage and basic income. Cyber and queer rights are also part of the mayday deliberations and activities.


In 1965 the activity on the main island diminished, but at the end of May that year an eruption began at a vent 0.6&nbsp;km (0.37&nbsp;mi) off the northern shore. By 28 May an island had appeared, and was named Syrtlingur (Little Surtsey). The new island was washed away during early June, but reappeared on 14 June. Eruptions at Syrtlingur were much smaller in scale than those that had built Surtsey, with the average rate of emission of volcanic materials being about a tenth of the rate at the main vent. Activity was short-lived, continuing until the beginning of October 1965, by which time the islet had an area of 0.15&nbsp;km² (0.058&nbsp;mi²). Once the eruptions had ceased, wave erosion rapidly wore the island away, and it disappeared beneath the waves on 24 October.<ref name="Thorarinsson II">{{citation
<gallery>
| first = Sigurður
Image:Md004.jpg|Poster Euromayday 004
| last = Þórarinsson
Image:Md005.jpg|Poster Euromayday 005
| authorlink =
Image:Md006.jpg|Poster Euromayday 006
| title = The Surtsey eruption: course of events and the development of Surtsey and other new islands
</gallery>
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report II
| pages = 117–123
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 1966
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_II.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>


During December 1965, more submarine activity occurred 0.9&nbsp;km (0.56&nbsp;mi) south-west of Surtsey, and another island was formed. It was named [[Jólnir]] (Christmas Island), and over the following eight months it appeared and disappeared several times, as wave erosion and volcanic activity alternated in dominance. Activity at Jólnir was much weaker than the activity at the main vent, and even weaker than that seen at Syrtlingur, but the island eventually grew to a maximum size of 70&nbsp;m (230&nbsp;ft) in height, covering an area of 0.3&nbsp;km² (0.11&nbsp;mi²), during July and early August 1966. Like Syrtlingur, though, after activity ceased on 8 August 1966, it was rapidly eroded, and dropped below sea level during October 1966.<ref name="Thorarinsson III">{{citation
===Rebelling against Precarity in France, Denmark, and the US===
| first = Sigurður
| last = Þórarinsson
| authorlink =
| title = The Surtsey eruption: course of events during the year 1966
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report III
| pages = 84–90
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 1967
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_III.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>


Effusive eruptions on the main island returned on 19 August 1966, with fresh lava flows giving it further resistance to erosion. The eruption rate diminished steadily, though, and on 5 June 1967, the eruption ended. The volcano has been dormant ever since. The total volume of lava emitted during the three-and-a-half-year eruption was about one cubic kilometre (0.24&nbsp;mi³), and the island's highest point was 174&nbsp;metres (570&nbsp;ft) above [[sea level]].<ref name="Decker" />
A core constituency of mayday has been the movement of [[Intermittents]], the French expression to refer to stage hands and showbiz personnel. In 2002-2005, the Intermittents captured the French imagination and filled the press with their inventive rebellious tactics (e.g. they famously disrupted live TV news programs and the 2004 edition of the Cannes festival) denouncing precarity in the form of cuts to their [[unemployment benefits]] (they counterproposed an alternative reform of the system which was so well crafted that put French élites and union leaders in an awkward position).


Since the end of the eruption, erosion has seen the island diminish in size. A large area on the south-east side has been eroded away completely, while a sand spit called ''Norðurtangi'' (north point) has grown on the north side of the island. It is estimated that about 0.024&nbsp;km³ (0.00575&nbsp;mi³) of material has been lost due to erosion &ndash; this represents about a quarter of the original above sea level volume of the island.<ref name="Garvin 2000">
In the early months of 2006, French youth rejected the CPE, the
{{citation
first-job contract introduced by the government who made it easier to
| first = J.B.
fire workers under age 26. Clashes with the riot police, as it reclaimed
| last = Garvin
Sorbonne from occupying students was the signal that something major
| authorlink =
was happening, as the university had been the epicenter of social
| first2 = R.S.
insurgence in [[1968]]. Four decades later, France was again paralyzed by huge student demonstrations and solidarity strikes called by the major French unions, as well as the more militant unions and organizations. With the vast majority of French universities occupied for more than a month, and the whole nation on strike, the [[Villepin]] government was forced to withdraw the provision, in a test of force with democracy in the streets that weakened the presidency itself. ''Le Monde'' commented that "précarité" was going to be a central issue in the upcoming 2007 presidential elections.
| last2 = Williams Jr
| first3 = J.J.
| last3 = Frawley
| first4 = W.B.
| last4 = Krabill
| title = Volumetric evolution of Surtsey, Iceland, from topographic maps and scanning airborne laser altimetry
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report XI
| pages = 127–134
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 2000
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_XI.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}
</ref>
<ref>{{citation
| title=Surtsey Topography
| publisher= NASA
| date=[[1998-11-12]]
| url=http://denali.gsfc.nasa.gov/research/garvin/surtsey.html
| accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}
</ref>


==Settlement of life==
A few months before, France had been rocked by generalized rioting of the French youth of Arab and African descent in its suburban ghettos
(''cités''), who sought to express angst at racial and economic discrimination
that they were experiencing from the rest of French society. Although expressions of the same national malaise and social anguish, banlieue rioters and student protesters did not really share tactics and demands. The French explosion of 2006 against precarity was followed a few months later by a lengthy general strike in [[Denmark]] to protest against welfare cuts especially discriminatory with respect to young people. All universities were occupied, and the right-wing government was forced to withdraw the provisions that had to do with student subsidies and other welfare benefits for young people, although it retained pension cuts for older employees.


A classic site for the study of [[Colonisation (biology)|biocolonisation]] from [[founder population]]s that arrive from outside (''[[allochthon]]ous''), Surtsey was declared a nature reserve in 1965 while the eruption was still in active progress. Today only a small number of scientists are permitted to land on Surtsey; the only way anyone else can see it closely is with a small plane. This allows the natural [[ecological succession]] for the island to proceed without outside interference. In 2008, [[UNESCO]] declared the island a [[World Heritage Site]], in recognition of its great scientific value.<ref>{{citation|url=http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=43039&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html|title=Canadian fossil park, an Icelandic volcanic island and archipelago in Yemen among sites added to UNESCO World Heritage List|publisher=UNESCO|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>
In a different context, [[May Day 2006]] was also a historic day of protest for U.S. immigrants, mostly of Latin-American origin, who mobilized in all major American cities to protest against a punitive anti-immigration bill being discussed in Congress. Hundreds of thousands of people from San Francisco to Chicago celebrated the first of May by taking the streets against increased repression of undocumented immigrants by the Bush administration. Grassroots and community organizing, helped and funded by the progressive wing of North-America's organized labor &mdash; which had already been behind the successful [[Justice for Janitors]] campaign, narrated by [[Ken Loach]] in ''Bread and Roses'', that has organized many legal and illegal immigrants in Los Angeles &mdash; were crucial for the media attention and social impact of the demonstrations.


===Catholic Origins===
===Plant life===


In the summer of 1965 the first [[vascular plant]] was found growing on Surtsey, [[moss]]es became visible in 1967 and [[lichen]]s were first found on the Surtsey lava in 1970.<ref name=Burrows>{{citation| title=Processes of Vegetation Change |first=Colin |last=Burrows |year=1990| publisher=Routledge | pages=124&ndash;127 | isbn=004580012X}}</ref> Plant colonization on Surtsey has been closely studied, the vascular plants in particular as they have been of far greater significance than mosses and lichens in the development of vegetation.<ref name=plants/>
In its English usage, ''Precarity'' was first used by [[Léonce Crenier]], a Catholic [[monk]] who had previously been active as an [[anarcho-communism|anarcho-communist]]. In [[1952]] the term was used by [[Dorothy Day]], writing for the [[Catholic Worker Movement]]:


Mosses and lichens now cover much of the island. During the island's first 20&nbsp;years, 20&nbsp;species of plants were observed at one time or another, but only 10 became established in the nutrient-poor sandy soil.
:''"True poverty is rare," a saintly priest writes to us from Martinique. "Nowadays communities are good, I am sure, but they are mistaken about poverty. They accept, admit on principle, poverty, but everything must be good and strong, buildings must be fireproof, Precarity is rejected everywhere, and precarity is an essential element of poverty. That has been forgotten. Here we want precarity in everything except the church. (...) Precarity enables us to help very much the poor. When a community is always building, and enlarging, and embellishing, which is good in itself, there is nothing left over for the poor. We have no right to do this as long as there are slums and breadlines somewhere.''<ref>[http://www.catholicworker.org/dorothyday/daytext.cfm?TextID=633&SearchTerm=luke,%20St Poverty and Precarity] by Dorothy Day</ref>.
As birds began nesting on the island, soil conditions improved, and more advanced species of plants were able to survive. In 1998, the first [[Woody plant|bush]] was found on the island &ndash; a tea-leaved [[willow]] ([[Salix phylicifolia]]), which can grow to heights of up to 4&nbsp;metres (13&nbsp;ft). In total at least 60&nbsp;species of plant have been found on Surtsey, of which about 30 have become established. More species continue to arrive, at a typical rate of roughly 2&ndash;5&nbsp;new species per year.<ref name=plants>{{citation| url=http://www.vulkaner.no/n/surtsey/esurtplant.html|title= The volcano island: Surtsey, Iceland: Plants| publisher=Our Beautiful World| accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref> In July 2007, five species of plants were found for the first time.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.icelandreview.com/icelandreview/daily_news/?cat_id=16539&ew_0_a_id=285261 |title=New plants found in Surtsey|journal=Iceland Review Online|date=[[2007-07-13]]|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>


===Birds===
== See also ==
*[[Casualisation]]
*[[Catholic social teaching]]
*[[Christian anarchism]]
*Defunct [[First Employment Contract]] (CPE)
*[[New Employment Contract]] (CNE)
*[[Directive on services in the internal market]], also known as "Bolkestein Directive".
*[[:de:Prekariat|Prekariat]] - the social class, not necessarily poor or members of a particular underclass, disposed towards precarity. The prekariat is the post-Fordist analogue of the [[proletariat]] (in German)


[[Image:Puffin2.jpg|thumb|right|150px|The first [[puffin]] nests were found on Surtsey in 2004]]
==References==
The expansion of bird life on the island has both relied on and helped to advance the spread of plant life. Birds use plants for nesting material, but also assist in the spreading of seeds, and fertilize the soil with their [[guano]].<ref name=thornton>{{citation|first=Ian |last=Thornton |first2= Tim|last2=New | title=Island Colonization: The Origin and Development of Island Communities |publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=178|isbn=0521854849}}</ref> [[Bird]]s began nesting on Surtsey three years after the eruptions ended, with [[fulmar]] and [[guillemot]] the first species to set up home. Twelve species are now regularly found on the island.<ref name=birds>{{citation|last=Petersen|first=Ævar|title=Bird Life on Surtsey|url=http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/biola_5.htm|publisher=The Surtsey Research Society|date=[[2007-05-06]]|accessdate=[[2008-07-14]]}}</ref>
{{reflist}}


A [[gull]] colony has been present since 1984, although gulls were seen briefly on the shores of the new island only weeks after it first appeared.<ref name=birds/> The gull colony has been particularly important in developing the plant life on Surtsey,<ref name=thornton/><ref name=birds/> and the gulls have had much more of an impact on plant colonisation than other breeding species due to their abundance. An expedition in 2004 found the first evidence of nesting [[Atlantic Puffin]]s,<ref name=birds/> which are extremely common in the rest of the [[archipelago]].<ref>{{citation|url=http://iceland.vefur.is/Iceland_nature/wildlife/puffins.htm|title=Puffins in Iceland|publisher=Iceland on the web|accessdate=[[2008-07-14]]}}</ref>
==External links==


As well as providing a home for some species of birds, Surtsey has also been used as a stopping-off point for [[Bird migration|migrating]] birds, particularly those en route between [[Europe]] and Iceland.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.vulkaner.no/v/volcan/surtsey_e.html|title=Surtsey, Iceland|publisher=Our Beautiful World|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref><ref>{{citation|last=Friðriksson|first=Sturla|last2=Magnússon|first2=Borgþór|url=http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/biola_1.htm|title=Colonization of the Land|publisher=The Surtsey Research Society|date=[[2007-05-06]]|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref> Species that have been seen briefly on the island include [[whooper swan]]s, various species of [[goose]], and [[raven]]s. Although Surtsey lies to the east of the main migration routes to Iceland, it has become a more common stopping point as its vegetation has improved.<ref>{{citation| url=http://www.vulkaner.no/n/surtsey/esurtbird.html| title= The volcano island: Surtsey, Iceland: Birdlife| publisher=Our Beautiful World|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>
* http://www.euromarches.org
* http://ec.europa.eu/employment_social/publications/2003/ke5103471_en.html
* http://www.euromayday.org/
* http://www.chainworkers.org/
* http://www.yomango.net
* http://www.cip-idf.org
* http://www.greenpeppermagazine.org/process/tiki-index.php?page=Precarity+Issue
* http://www.metamute.org/en/node/415
* http://eipcp.net/transversal/0704
* http://adbusters.org/blogs/Big_Ideas_Precarity.html
* http://journal.fibreculture.org/issue5/neilson_rossiter.html
* http://www.republicart.net/disc/precariat/index.htm
* http://helsinki.euromayday.org/index2.htm
* http://berlin.euromayday.org/
* http://www.maydaysur.org/
* http://www.maydayfr.org/
* http://www.actupparis.org/
* http://www.generation-precaire.org/
* http://www.ac.eu.org
* http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/rough/2007/04/france_the_prec.html


===Marine life===
[[Category:Anti-globalization]]
Soon after the island's formation, [[Pinniped|seals]] were seen around the island. They soon began basking there, particularly on the northern spit, which grew as the waves eroded the island. Seals were found to be breeding on the island in 1983, and a group of up to 70 made the island their breeding spot. [[Grey seal]]s are more common on the island than [[common seal]]s, but both are now well established.<ref>{{citation|last=Hauksson|first=Erlingur|date=1992|title=Observations on Seals on Surtsey in the Period 1980–1989|publisher=The Surtsey Research Society|journal=Surtsey Research Progress Report X|url=http://www.surtsey.is/SRS_publ/1992-X/1992_X_2_03.pdf|format=pdf|pages=31–32|accessdate=[[2008-07-14]]}}</ref> The presence of seals attracts [[orca]]s, which are frequently seen in the waters around the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago and now frequent the waters around Surtsey.
[[Category:Business ethics]]
[[Category:Community organizing]]
[[Category:Corporate crime]]
[[Category:Employment]]
[[Category:Globalization]]
[[Category:Industrial Workers of the World]]
[[Category:Labor]]
[[Category:Labor disputes]]
[[Category:Labor history]]
[[Category:Labour relations]]
[[Category:Working conditions]]
[[Category:Feminism and social class]]


On the submarine portion of the island, many marine species are found. [[Starfish]] are abundant, as are [[sea urchin]]s and [[limpet]]s. The rocks are covered in [[algae]], and [[seaweed]] covers much of the submarine slopes of the volcano, with its densest cover between 10 and 20&nbsp;metres (33 to 66&nbsp;ft) below sea level.<ref>{{citation| url=http://www.vulkaner.no/n/surtsey/esurtseal.html|title= The volcano Island Surtsey, Iceland: Sealife| publisher=Our Beautiful World|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>
[[de:Prekarisierung]]

[[fr:Précarité]]
===Other life===
[[ja:プレカリアート]]

[[fi:Prekariaatti]]
[[Insect]]s arrived on Surtsey soon after its formation, and were first detected in 1964. The original arrivals were flying insects, carried to the island by winds and their own power. Some were believed to have been blown across from as far away as [[Mainland Europe]]. Later insect life arrived on floating [[driftwood]], and both live animals and corpses washed up on the island. When a large, grass-covered tussock was washed ashore in 1974, scientists took half of it for analysis and discovered 663 land invertebrates, mostly [[mite]]s and [[springtail]]s, the great majority of which had survived the crossing.<ref>
{{citation
| first = Erling
| last = Ólafsson
| authorlink =
| title = The development of the land-arthropod fauna on Surtsey, Iceland, during 1971–1976 with notes on terrestrial Oligochaeta
| journal = Surtsey Research Progress Report VIII
| pages = 41–46
| publisher = The Surtsey Research Society
| date = 1978
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_VIII.htm
| accessdate =[[2008-07-08]]}}</ref>

The establishment of insect life provided some food for birds, and birds in turn helped many species to become established on the island. The bodies of dead birds provide sustenance for [[carnivorous]] insects, while the fertilisation of the soil and resulting promotion of plant life provides a viable habitat for [[herbivorous]] insects.

Some higher forms of land life are now colonising the soil of Surtsey. The first [[earthworm]] was found in a soil sample in 1993, probably carried over from [[Heimaey]] by a bird. [[Slug]]s were found in 1998, and appeared to be similar to varieties found in the southern Icelandic mainland. [[Spider]]s and [[beetle]]s have also become established.<ref>{{citation| url=http://www.vulkaner.no/n/surtsey/esurtinns.html| title= The volcano island: Surtsey, Iceland: Insects| publisher=Our Beautiful World| accessdate=2008-07-08}}</ref><ref>
{{citation
| first = Hólmfríður
| last = Sigurðardóttir
| authorlink =
| title = Status of collembolans (Collembola) on Surtsey, Iceland, in 1995 and first encounter of earthworms (lumbricidae) in 1993
| journal = Surtsey Research XI
| pages = 51–55
| publisher = Surtsey Research Committee
| date = 2000
| location = Reykjav&iacute;k, Iceland
| url = http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/report/report_XI.htm
| accessdate = [[2008-07-08]]}}
</ref>

==Future==
[[Image:Surtsey from plane, 1999.jpg|thumb|300px|left|The island of Surtsey in 1999]]
Following the end of the eruption, scientists established a grid of benchmarks against which they measured the change in the shape of the island. In the 20&nbsp;years following the end of the eruption, measurements revealed that the island was steadily slumping vertically and had lost about a metre (3.3&nbsp;ft) in height. The rate of slumping was initially about 20&nbsp;cm (8&nbsp;in) per year but slowed to 1&ndash;2&nbsp;cm (0.4&ndash;0.8&nbsp;in) a year by the 1990s. It had several causes: settling of the loose [[tephra]] forming the bulk of the volcano, compaction of sea floor [[sediment]]s underlying the island, and downward warping of the [[lithosphere]] due to the weight of the volcano.<ref>{{citation|first=J.G.|last= Moore|first2=Sveinn|last2=Jakobsson|first3=Josef|last3=Holmjarn|year=1992|title=Subsidence of Surtsey volcano, 1967–1991|journal=Bulletin of Volcanology|volume=55|pages=17–24}}</ref>

The typical pattern of volcanism in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago is for each eruption site to see just a single eruption, and so the island is unlikely to be enlarged in the future by further eruptions. The heavy seas around the island have been eroding it ever since the island appeared, and since the end of the eruption almost half its original area has been lost. The island currently loses about 10,000&nbsp;square metres (2.5&nbsp;acres) of its surface area each year.<ref name="jakobssen3">{{citation|last=Jakobssen|first=Sveinn P.|year=2005|title=Erosion of the Island|url=http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/geo_2.htm|publisher=The Surtsey Research Society|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]|date=[[2007-05-06]]}}</ref>

[[Image:Small islands in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago, Iceland.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Other islands in the archipelago show the effects of centuries of erosion]]
However, the island is unlikely to disappear entirely in the near future. The eroded area consisted mostly of loose [[tephra]], easily washed away by wind and waves. Most of the remaining area is capped by hard lava flows, which are much more resistant to erosion. In addition, complex chemical reactions within the loose tephra within the island have gradually formed highly erosion resistant [[tuff]] material, in a process known as [[Palagonite|palagonitization]]. On Surtsey this process has happened quite rapidly, due to high temperatures not far below the surface.<ref>{{citation|last=Jakobssen|first=Sveinn P.|year=2005|title=The Formation of Palagonite Tuffs|url=http://www.surtsey.is/pp_ens/geo_4.htm|publisher=The Surtsey Research Society|accessdate=[[2008-07-08]]|date=[[2007-05-06]]}}</ref>

Estimates of how long Surtsey will survive are based on the rate of erosion seen up to the present day. Assuming that the current rate does not change, the island will be mostly at or below sea level by 2100. However, the rate of erosion is likely to slow as the tougher core of the island is exposed. A more optimistic assessment assuming that the rate of erosion will slow exponentially suggests that the island will survive for many centuries.<ref name="Garvin 2000" /> An idea of what it will look like in the future is given by the other small islands in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago, which formed in the same way as Surtsey several thousand years ago, and have eroded away substantially since they were formed.<ref name="jakobssen3" />

==See also==
* [[List of recently born islands]]
* [[Geography of Iceland]]
* [[Iceland plume]]
* [[List of islands off Iceland]]
* [[List of volcanoes in Iceland]]
* [[Volcanoes of Iceland]]

== References ==
{{reflist|2}}

== External links ==
{{commoncat}}
*[http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/volc_images/europe_west_asia/surtsey.html Aerial photos, maps and volcanic geology of Surtsey.]
*[http://www.visitwestmanislands.com Visit Westman Islands]
*[http://denali.gsfc.nasa.gov/research/garvin/surtsey.html Surtsey Topography]
*[http://www.surtsey.is/index_eng.htm The Surtsey Research Society], which administers the island
*[http://www.ust.is/LogOgReglur/Fridlysingar/Fridlond/nr/246 A notice from the Environmental & Food Agency] declaring Surtsey a protected area {{is_icon}}
*[http://www.explorenorth.com/library/weekly/aa042601a.htm Explore North site illustrates postage stamps.]
*[http://www.vulkaner.no/v/volcan/surtsey_e.html Extensive information about plant and bird life on the island]

{{Islands of Iceland}}
{{coord|63.303|N|20.6047|W|display=title}}

[[Category:Volcanoes of Iceland]]
[[Category:Uninhabited islands]]
[[Category:New islands]]
[[Category:World Heritage Sites in Iceland]]

{{Link FA|cs}}
{{Link FA|he}}
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{{Link FA|pl}}
{{Link FA|tr}}

[[az:Surtsey]]
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[[eo:Surtsey]]
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[[he:סירטסיי]]
[[lv:Surtseja]]
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Revision as of 18:25, 13 October 2008

Surtsey
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Surtsey, sixteen days after the onset of the eruption
CriteriaNatural: ix
Reference1267
Inscription2008 (32nd Session)

Surtsey (Icelandic: "Surtur's island") is a volcanic island off the southern coast of Iceland. At 63°18′11″N 20°36′17″W / 63.303°N 20.6047°W / 63.303; -20.6047 it is also the southernmost point of Iceland. It was formed in a volcanic eruption which began 130 metres (426 ft) below sea level, and reached the surface on 14 November 1963. The eruption may have started a few days earlier and lasted until 5 June 1967, when the island reached its maximum size of 2.7 km² (1.0 mi²). Since then, wind and wave erosion has seen the island steadily diminish in size: as of 2002, its surface area was 1.4 km² (0.54 mi²).[1]

The new island was named after the fire god Surtr from Norse mythology, and was intensively studied by volcanologists during its creation and, since the end of the eruption, has been of great interest to botanists and biologists as life has gradually colonised the originally barren island. The undersea vents that produced Surtsey are part of the Vestmannaeyjar (Westmann Isles) submarine volcanic system, part of the fissure of the sea floor called the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Vestmannaeyjar also produced the famous eruption of Eldfell on the island of Heimaey in 1973. The eruption that created Surtsey also created a few other small islands along this volcanic chain, such as Jólnir and other unnamed peaks. Most of these eroded away fairly quickly.

Precursors to the eruption

Surtsey in southwest Iceland
Scheme of the Surtseyan eruption
1: Water vapour cloud
2: Cupressoid ash
3: Crater
4: Water
5: Layers of lava and ash
6: Stratum
7: Magma conduit
8: Magma chamber
9: Dike


At 07:15 UTC+0 on 14 November 1963, the cook of Ísleifur II, a trawler sailing off the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago south of Iceland, spotted something south-west of the boat, which turned out to be a rising column of dark smoke. The vessel went to investigate the smoke. The captain thought it might have been a boat on fire, but instead they encountered explosive eruptions giving off black columns of ash, indicating that a volcanic eruption had begun beneath the sea.[2]

Although the eruption was unexpected, there had been some indications before it began that volcanic activity was imminent. From 6–8 November, weak tremors were detected at Kirkjubaejarklaustur, from an epicentre measured to be 140 km (87 mi) distant (approximately the distance of Surtsey), while on 12 November, a seismograph in Reykjavík recorded weak tremors for ten hours, but their location was not determined.[3] Two days before the eruption began, a marine research vessel noted that the sea in the area was somewhat warmer than normal,[4] and at the same time, people in the coastal town of Vík on the mainland 80 km (50 mi) away had noticed a smell of hydrogen sulphide.[2]

It is likely that the eruption had begun some days before 14 November. The sea floor is 130 metres (426 ft) below sea level, and at this depth explosive eruptions would be quenched by the water pressure. As the eruption built up a volcano approaching sea level, the explosions could no longer be contained, and activity broke the surface.[2]

Early days

Surtsey's ash column rises over the newly forming island

By 11:00 on 14 November 1963, the eruption column had reached several kilometres in height. At first the eruptions took place at three separate vents along a north-east by south-west trending fissure, but by the afternoon the separate eruption columns had merged into one along the erupting fissure. Over the next week, explosions were continuous, and after just a few days the new island, formed mainly of scoria, measured over 500 metres (1640 ft) in length and had reached a height of 45 metres (147 ft).[5]

The new island was named after the fire giant Surtr from Norse mythology. As the eruptions continued, they became concentrated at one vent along the fissure and began to build the island into a more circular shape. By 24 November, the island measured about 900 metres by 650 metres (2950 by 2130 ft). The violent explosions caused by the meeting of lava and sea water meant that the island consisted of a loose pile of volcanic rock (scoria), which was eroded rapidly by north Atlantic storms during the winter. However, eruptions more than kept pace with wave erosion, and by February 1964, the island had a maximum diameter of over 1300 metres (4265 ft).[2]

One notable event early in the island's life was the landing of three French journalists representing the magazine Paris Match on 6 December 1963. They stayed for about 15 minutes before violent explosions encouraged them to leave. The journalists jokingly claimed French sovereignty over the island, but Iceland quickly asserted that the new island belonged to it.[6]

Permanent island

The explosive phreatomagmatic eruptions caused by the easy access of water to the erupting vents threw rocks up to a kilometre (0.6 mi) away from the island, and sent ash clouds as high as 10 km (6 mi) up into the atmosphere. The loose pile of unconsolidated tephra would quickly have been washed away had the supply of fresh magma dwindled, and large clouds of dust were often seen blowing away from the island during this stage of the eruption.[2]

By early 1964, though, the continuing eruptions had built the island to such a size that sea water could no longer easily reach the vents, and the volcanic activity became much less explosive. Instead, lava fountains and flows became the main form of activity. These resulted in a hard cap of extremely erosion-resistant rock being laid down on top of much of the loose volcanic pile, which prevented the island being washed away rapidly. Effusive eruptions continued until 1965, by which time the island had a surface area of 2.5 km² (1 mi²).[2]

On 28 December 1963 submarine activity 2.5 km (1.5 mi) to the north-east of Surtsey caused the formation of a ridge 100 m (328 ft) high on the sea floor. This seamount was named Surtla, but never reached sea level. Eruptions at Surtla ended on 6 January 1964, and it has since been eroded from its minimum depth of 23 m (75 ft) to 47 m (154 ft) below sea level.[7]

Eruption gradually dies down

The eruption vents in 1999

In 1965 the activity on the main island diminished, but at the end of May that year an eruption began at a vent 0.6 km (0.37 mi) off the northern shore. By 28 May an island had appeared, and was named Syrtlingur (Little Surtsey). The new island was washed away during early June, but reappeared on 14 June. Eruptions at Syrtlingur were much smaller in scale than those that had built Surtsey, with the average rate of emission of volcanic materials being about a tenth of the rate at the main vent. Activity was short-lived, continuing until the beginning of October 1965, by which time the islet had an area of 0.15 km² (0.058 mi²). Once the eruptions had ceased, wave erosion rapidly wore the island away, and it disappeared beneath the waves on 24 October.[8]

During December 1965, more submarine activity occurred 0.9 km (0.56 mi) south-west of Surtsey, and another island was formed. It was named Jólnir (Christmas Island), and over the following eight months it appeared and disappeared several times, as wave erosion and volcanic activity alternated in dominance. Activity at Jólnir was much weaker than the activity at the main vent, and even weaker than that seen at Syrtlingur, but the island eventually grew to a maximum size of 70 m (230 ft) in height, covering an area of 0.3 km² (0.11 mi²), during July and early August 1966. Like Syrtlingur, though, after activity ceased on 8 August 1966, it was rapidly eroded, and dropped below sea level during October 1966.[9]

Effusive eruptions on the main island returned on 19 August 1966, with fresh lava flows giving it further resistance to erosion. The eruption rate diminished steadily, though, and on 5 June 1967, the eruption ended. The volcano has been dormant ever since. The total volume of lava emitted during the three-and-a-half-year eruption was about one cubic kilometre (0.24 mi³), and the island's highest point was 174 metres (570 ft) above sea level.[2]

Since the end of the eruption, erosion has seen the island diminish in size. A large area on the south-east side has been eroded away completely, while a sand spit called Norðurtangi (north point) has grown on the north side of the island. It is estimated that about 0.024 km³ (0.00575 mi³) of material has been lost due to erosion – this represents about a quarter of the original above sea level volume of the island.[10] [11]

Settlement of life

A classic site for the study of biocolonisation from founder populations that arrive from outside (allochthonous), Surtsey was declared a nature reserve in 1965 while the eruption was still in active progress. Today only a small number of scientists are permitted to land on Surtsey; the only way anyone else can see it closely is with a small plane. This allows the natural ecological succession for the island to proceed without outside interference. In 2008, UNESCO declared the island a World Heritage Site, in recognition of its great scientific value.[12]

Plant life

In the summer of 1965 the first vascular plant was found growing on Surtsey, mosses became visible in 1967 and lichens were first found on the Surtsey lava in 1970.[13] Plant colonization on Surtsey has been closely studied, the vascular plants in particular as they have been of far greater significance than mosses and lichens in the development of vegetation.[14]

Mosses and lichens now cover much of the island. During the island's first 20 years, 20 species of plants were observed at one time or another, but only 10 became established in the nutrient-poor sandy soil. As birds began nesting on the island, soil conditions improved, and more advanced species of plants were able to survive. In 1998, the first bush was found on the island – a tea-leaved willow (Salix phylicifolia), which can grow to heights of up to 4 metres (13 ft). In total at least 60 species of plant have been found on Surtsey, of which about 30 have become established. More species continue to arrive, at a typical rate of roughly 2–5 new species per year.[14] In July 2007, five species of plants were found for the first time.[15]

Birds

The first puffin nests were found on Surtsey in 2004

The expansion of bird life on the island has both relied on and helped to advance the spread of plant life. Birds use plants for nesting material, but also assist in the spreading of seeds, and fertilize the soil with their guano.[16] Birds began nesting on Surtsey three years after the eruptions ended, with fulmar and guillemot the first species to set up home. Twelve species are now regularly found on the island.[17]

A gull colony has been present since 1984, although gulls were seen briefly on the shores of the new island only weeks after it first appeared.[17] The gull colony has been particularly important in developing the plant life on Surtsey,[16][17] and the gulls have had much more of an impact on plant colonisation than other breeding species due to their abundance. An expedition in 2004 found the first evidence of nesting Atlantic Puffins,[17] which are extremely common in the rest of the archipelago.[18]

As well as providing a home for some species of birds, Surtsey has also been used as a stopping-off point for migrating birds, particularly those en route between Europe and Iceland.[19][20] Species that have been seen briefly on the island include whooper swans, various species of goose, and ravens. Although Surtsey lies to the east of the main migration routes to Iceland, it has become a more common stopping point as its vegetation has improved.[21]

Marine life

Soon after the island's formation, seals were seen around the island. They soon began basking there, particularly on the northern spit, which grew as the waves eroded the island. Seals were found to be breeding on the island in 1983, and a group of up to 70 made the island their breeding spot. Grey seals are more common on the island than common seals, but both are now well established.[22] The presence of seals attracts orcas, which are frequently seen in the waters around the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago and now frequent the waters around Surtsey.

On the submarine portion of the island, many marine species are found. Starfish are abundant, as are sea urchins and limpets. The rocks are covered in algae, and seaweed covers much of the submarine slopes of the volcano, with its densest cover between 10 and 20 metres (33 to 66 ft) below sea level.[23]

Other life

Insects arrived on Surtsey soon after its formation, and were first detected in 1964. The original arrivals were flying insects, carried to the island by winds and their own power. Some were believed to have been blown across from as far away as Mainland Europe. Later insect life arrived on floating driftwood, and both live animals and corpses washed up on the island. When a large, grass-covered tussock was washed ashore in 1974, scientists took half of it for analysis and discovered 663 land invertebrates, mostly mites and springtails, the great majority of which had survived the crossing.[24]

The establishment of insect life provided some food for birds, and birds in turn helped many species to become established on the island. The bodies of dead birds provide sustenance for carnivorous insects, while the fertilisation of the soil and resulting promotion of plant life provides a viable habitat for herbivorous insects.

Some higher forms of land life are now colonising the soil of Surtsey. The first earthworm was found in a soil sample in 1993, probably carried over from Heimaey by a bird. Slugs were found in 1998, and appeared to be similar to varieties found in the southern Icelandic mainland. Spiders and beetles have also become established.[25][26]

Future

The island of Surtsey in 1999

Following the end of the eruption, scientists established a grid of benchmarks against which they measured the change in the shape of the island. In the 20 years following the end of the eruption, measurements revealed that the island was steadily slumping vertically and had lost about a metre (3.3 ft) in height. The rate of slumping was initially about 20 cm (8 in) per year but slowed to 1–2 cm (0.4–0.8 in) a year by the 1990s. It had several causes: settling of the loose tephra forming the bulk of the volcano, compaction of sea floor sediments underlying the island, and downward warping of the lithosphere due to the weight of the volcano.[27]

The typical pattern of volcanism in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago is for each eruption site to see just a single eruption, and so the island is unlikely to be enlarged in the future by further eruptions. The heavy seas around the island have been eroding it ever since the island appeared, and since the end of the eruption almost half its original area has been lost. The island currently loses about 10,000 square metres (2.5 acres) of its surface area each year.[28]

Other islands in the archipelago show the effects of centuries of erosion

However, the island is unlikely to disappear entirely in the near future. The eroded area consisted mostly of loose tephra, easily washed away by wind and waves. Most of the remaining area is capped by hard lava flows, which are much more resistant to erosion. In addition, complex chemical reactions within the loose tephra within the island have gradually formed highly erosion resistant tuff material, in a process known as palagonitization. On Surtsey this process has happened quite rapidly, due to high temperatures not far below the surface.[29]

Estimates of how long Surtsey will survive are based on the rate of erosion seen up to the present day. Assuming that the current rate does not change, the island will be mostly at or below sea level by 2100. However, the rate of erosion is likely to slow as the tougher core of the island is exposed. A more optimistic assessment assuming that the rate of erosion will slow exponentially suggests that the island will survive for many centuries.[10] An idea of what it will look like in the future is given by the other small islands in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago, which formed in the same way as Surtsey several thousand years ago, and have eroded away substantially since they were formed.[28]

See also

References

  1. ^ Jakobsson, Sveinn P. (2007-05-06), Surtsey - Geology, The Surtsey Research Society, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Decker, Robert; Decker, Barbara (1997), Volcanoes, New York: Freeman, ISBN 0716731746
  3. ^ Sigtryggsson, Hlynur; Sigurðsson, Eiríkur (1966), "Earth Tremors from the Surtsey Eruption 1963-1965: a preliminary survey", Surtsey Research Progress Report II, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 131–138, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  4. ^ Malmberg, Svend-Aage (1965), "The temperature effect of the Surtsey eruption: a report on the sea water", Surtsey Research Progress Report I, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 6–9, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  5. ^ Þórarinsson, Sigurður (1965), "The Surtsey eruption: Course of events and the development of the new island", Surtsey Research Progress Report I, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 51–55, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  6. ^ Doutreleau, Vanessa (2006), "Surtsey, naissances d'une île", Ethnologie française, XXXVII, Presses Universitaires de France: 421–433, ISBN 2-13-055455-5, ISSN 0046-2616, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help) Template:Fr icon
  7. ^ Norrman, John; Erlingsson, Ulf (1992), "The submarine morphology of Surtsey volcanic group", Surtsey Research Progress Report X, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 45–56, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  8. ^ Þórarinsson, Sigurður (1966), "The Surtsey eruption: course of events and the development of Surtsey and other new islands", Surtsey Research Progress Report II, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 117–123, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  9. ^ Þórarinsson, Sigurður (1967), "The Surtsey eruption: course of events during the year 1966", Surtsey Research Progress Report III, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 84–90, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  10. ^ a b Garvin, J.B.; Williams Jr, R.S.; Frawley, J.J.; Krabill, W.B. (2000), "Volumetric evolution of Surtsey, Iceland, from topographic maps and scanning airborne laser altimetry", Surtsey Research Progress Report XI, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 127–134, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  11. ^ Surtsey Topography, NASA, 1998-11-12, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  12. ^ Canadian fossil park, an Icelandic volcanic island and archipelago in Yemen among sites added to UNESCO World Heritage List, UNESCO, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  13. ^ Burrows, Colin (1990), Processes of Vegetation Change, Routledge, pp. 124–127, ISBN 004580012X
  14. ^ a b The volcano island: Surtsey, Iceland: Plants, Our Beautiful World, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  15. ^ "New plants found in Surtsey", Iceland Review Online, 2007-07-13, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  16. ^ a b Thornton, Ian; New, Tim, Island Colonization: The Origin and Development of Island Communities, Cambridge University Press, p. 178, ISBN 0521854849
  17. ^ a b c d Petersen, Ævar (2007-05-06), Bird Life on Surtsey, The Surtsey Research Society, retrieved 2008-07-14 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  18. ^ Puffins in Iceland, Iceland on the web, retrieved 2008-07-14 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  19. ^ Surtsey, Iceland, Our Beautiful World, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  20. ^ Friðriksson, Sturla; Magnússon, Borgþór (2007-05-06), Colonization of the Land, The Surtsey Research Society, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  21. ^ The volcano island: Surtsey, Iceland: Birdlife, Our Beautiful World, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  22. ^ Hauksson, Erlingur (1992), "Observations on Seals on Surtsey in the Period 1980–1989" (pdf), Surtsey Research Progress Report X, The Surtsey Research Society: 31–32, retrieved 2008-07-14 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  23. ^ The volcano Island Surtsey, Iceland: Sealife, Our Beautiful World, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  24. ^ Ólafsson, Erling (1978), "The development of the land-arthropod fauna on Surtsey, Iceland, during 1971–1976 with notes on terrestrial Oligochaeta", Surtsey Research Progress Report VIII, Reykjavík, Iceland: The Surtsey Research Society: 41–46, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  25. ^ The volcano island: Surtsey, Iceland: Insects, Our Beautiful World, retrieved 2008-07-08
  26. ^ Sigurðardóttir, Hólmfríður (2000), "Status of collembolans (Collembola) on Surtsey, Iceland, in 1995 and first encounter of earthworms (lumbricidae) in 1993", Surtsey Research XI, Reykjavík, Iceland: Surtsey Research Committee: 51–55, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  27. ^ Moore, J.G.; Jakobsson, Sveinn; Holmjarn, Josef (1992), "Subsidence of Surtsey volcano, 1967–1991", Bulletin of Volcanology, 55: 17–24
  28. ^ a b Jakobssen, Sveinn P. (2007-05-06), Erosion of the Island, The Surtsey Research Society, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  29. ^ Jakobssen, Sveinn P. (2007-05-06), The Formation of Palagonite Tuffs, The Surtsey Research Society, retrieved 2008-07-08 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)

External links

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63°18′11″N 20°36′17″W / 63.303°N 20.6047°W / 63.303; -20.6047

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