A major eruption in Iceland in 2010 caused widespread disruption to air travel between Europe and North America, costing airlines an estimated US$3 billion as they cancelled more than 100,000 flights.
The evacuation comes after the region was shaken by hundreds of small earthquakes every day for more than two weeks as scientists monitor a build-up of magma some five kilometres underground.
Concern about a possible eruption increased in the early hours of Thursday when a 4.8-magnitude earthquake hit the area, forcing the internationally known Blue Lagoon geothermal resort to close temporarily.
The seismic activity started in an area north of Grindavik, where there is a network of 2000-year-old craters, geology professor Pall Einarrson, told Iceland’s RUV. The magma corridor is about 10km long and spreading, he said.
“The biggest earthquakes originated there, under this old series of craters, but since then it [the magma corridor] has been getting longer - [it] went under the urban area in Grindavík and is heading even further and towards the sea,” he said.