The woman, named Kayleigh, from Bedford, and her fellow passengers jetted into Keflavik International Airport just over 12 hours after the eruption, which was 20 miles from Reykjavik.
While the eruption was relatively small, it melted around 10 percent of the glacier at the summit, which formed a volatile mixture of volcanic lava and ice, known as lahar, and gushed into the river ...