Öskjuvatn

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.LOCAL_NAMEÖskjuvatn
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.LOCATIONNortheastern Region, Island

Öskjuvatn is a lake in the Highlands of Iceland. Its surface area is about 11 km². With a depth of 217 m, it is the second deepest lake in Iceland after Jökulsárlón.The lake is situated in the crater of the volcano Askja in the north-east of the glacier Vatnajökull. The name Öskjuvatn simply means Askja lake. Like the neighbouring crater Víti, it was created by an enormous volcanic eruption in 1875.On July 10, 1907, two German scientists, Walter von Knebel and Max Rudloff disappeared while exploring the lake in a small boat. Knebel's fiancée, Ina von Grumbkow, led an expedition in search of them with a vulcanologist Hans Reck, but no trace of them was ever found. Suppositions at the time suggested that seismic volcanic disturbances could have caused a landslip or similar occurrence, and recorded that only two days previously the telegraph cable to Iceland had been broken by deep water disturbances for the first time since it was laid, close to the Icelandic coast.

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.TAGS InnsjøSkjult perleVulkansk området
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.DOWNLOAD landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.DOWNLOAD landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.SEE_MORE
 

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.MORE_INFORMATION_AND_CONTACT

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Öskjuvatn

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.ADDRESS Iceland

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.COORDINATES 65°1'50.259" N -16°44'38.047" E

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.MOBILE_PANEL.HEADER

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.MOBILE_PANEL.SUB_HEADER
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.MOBILE_PANEL.FOOTER
landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.TITLE landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.DESCRIPTION
landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.USE landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.NOT_NOW