The depths of the quakes vary from about 15 km depth (crust-mantle boundary) to near surface. The area is located on an active fault line related to rifting, and a possible cause of the earthquake swarm could be a magmatic intrusion at Tjörnes Fracture Zone volcano (VD).

mage above: Map of relative locations, September 25 to October 1, 2013 offshore North Iceland. Roughly 1000 earthquakes have been recorded in the swarm. Topography of seabed: Bryndís Brandsdóttir, Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Iceland.

Location of recent quakes with relation to Tjörnes Fracture Zone volcano.
The offshore Tjörnes Fracture Zone is an oblique transform zone that separates the northern volcanic zone of Iceland from the Kolbeinsey Ridge, part of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge north of Iceland. A submarine eruption was reported during 1867-1868 at the SE part of the fissure system off the northern coast of Iceland along the Manareyjar Ridge immediately north of Manareyjar Island (GVP).






