Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1979, Page 37

Jökull - 01.12.1979, Page 37
loessial soil is very rapid, which means that the soil cover thickens so quickly that tephra layers of small difference in age are separated in the soil sections. Iceland is also a country where relatively reliable written records of volcanic eruptions are more abundant and go farther back than in most vol- canic areas. In Iceland tephrochronology has been applied in: 1. Studies of eruption-history and eruption- mechanism of the volcanoes. 2. Studies of fluvial erosion and wind erosion. 3. Datings of glacier oscillations. 4. Studies of periglacial phenomena, especially frost crack polygons. 5. Pollenanalytical studies of vegetation changes. 6. Archaeological studies, especially datings of farm ruins. 7. Dating of ice cores from glaciers. 8. Establishing a tephrochronological connection between Iceland and other countries. Three examples of the results of these appli- cations will be mentioned here: Eruption history Tephrochronological studies of the eruption his- Fig. 3. Outlines of the tephra sectors of some his- torical eruptions. tory of Hekla have revealed that this most famous of Iceland’s active volcanoes is of Postglacial age, that its activity is cyclic, each cycle beginning with a purely explosive acid eruption preceded by a long repose. Other Hekla eruptions are mixed ones. The oldest acid Hekla tephra, designated H5, is about 7000 years old, the youngest, H1; was produced by the first Hekla eruption in historical time in 1104 A. D. Since then Hekla has erupted 14 times (Fig. 2). The Si02 content of the initial phase of each eruption is roughly proportional to the length of the preceding repose. Fig. 3 shows the extension of some historical tephra layers. Fig. 4. Soil profile and diagram showing tephra layers, rate of soil thickening and variation in the coarseness of loessial soil 15 km W of Hekla. The profile to the right is'the same as the left one except that the tephra layers have been excluded. 1: black tephra; 2: light tephra; 3: sandy soil; 4: fine-sandy soil; 5: silty soil. JÖKULL 29. ÁR 35
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