مواعيد العملمغلق (General Access Rule)
الأربعاء, أبريل 29, 2026
فوهة كيريد، منطقة غريمسنيس، جنوب آيسلندا
العودة إلى travel
geology

Kerid Crater Geology - How the Volcanic Crater Formed

A traveler-friendly geology explainer for Kerid Crater, covering formation, rock colors, and why the lake appears blue or green.

2/4/2026
20 min read
Aerial perspective of Kerid Crater showing volcanic bowl shape

Kerid is part of Iceland's volcanic story, where magma, ash, and time reshape the surface into dramatic forms.

Geology in plain terms

Kerid is commonly described as a volcanic crater that later filled with water, producing the lake seen today. Its steep sides expose layered volcanic material and oxidation-rich tones.

What your eyes are reading

Feature Geological clue
Red slopes Oxidized volcanic material
Dark bands Basaltic components and ash-rich layers
Lake color shifts Light angle, depth, minerals, sky reflection

Why the crater shape matters

  1. The bowl-like form channels wind.
  2. Elevation around the rim creates changing perspective.
  3. Lake level and seasonal freeze-thaw alter visual texture.

Field observation game

  • Compare slope color in sun vs cloud.
  • Observe grain size differences along path cuts.
  • Notice how water tone changes as you move around the rim.
Myth vs reality

Myth: the lake is always the same bright blue.

Reality: color is dynamic and depends on weather, season, and angle.

Bottom line

Kerid is not just a scenic stop; it is a compact outdoor geology lesson where volcanic history is visible from almost every viewpoint.

عن الكاتب

Iceland Travel Desk

Iceland Travel Desk

أُعد هذا الدليل للمسافرين الذين يريدون فهم كيريد بما يتجاوز لقطة سريعة على وسائل التواصل، عبر نصائح عملية وسياق جيولوجي وإرشادات تخطيط واقعية لظروف آيسلندا.

Tags

Kerid Geology
Volcano
Iceland Geology
Crater Lake
Science Travel

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