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Eldgjá

Eldgjá
Type
Canyons, Volcanoes, Nature
Location
Eldgjá, South Highlands, Iceland
Rating
Top Pick
Price
Free

The world's largest volcanic canyon, stretching 75 km through the South Highlands — a primordial landscape of craters, lava, and the magnificent Ófærufoss waterfall.

Eldgjá (“Fire Canyon”) is the largest volcanic canyon on Earth, stretching about 75 km across the Highlands north of Kirkjubæjarklaustur. It was formed in one of history’s greatest volcanic eruptions around 934 AD, when a fissure eruption poured out enormous volumes of basalt lava — an event so catastrophic it triggered a climate-cooling event recorded across the Northern Hemisphere.

Today the canyon is a place of dark, elemental beauty: vast walls of lava tower over the canyon floor, moss and heather slowly reclaiming the ancient basalt. At the canyon’s heart sits Ófærufoss, a striking waterfall that once had a natural arch of lava rock spanning its middle gorge (the arch collapsed in 1993). The hike to Ófærufoss from the F233 road is a 6 km round trip through dramatic terrain.

Access is via the F233 (Eldgjávegur), a proper highland F-road requiring a 4×4, open approximately July to September. Eldgjá is often combined with Landmannalaugar on multi-day highland tours. No facilities at the site.

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