Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1980, Page 73

Jökull - 01.12.1980, Page 73
Mynd 4: Kort er sýnir svæði fjarlæg íslandi, sem aska féll á í Kötlu- gosunum 1525, 1660 og 1755 og Grimsvatna(?)- gosinu 1619. — Fig. 4: Map showing places outside Iceland where ash is re- corded to have fallen during the Katla eruptions in 1625, 1660 and 1775 and the Grímsvötn(?) eruption in 1619. notwithstanding the great devastations, that have been made in other parts of the world by earthquakes, we have been entirely free from any disaster of that nature; nor has anything extraordinary happened in this country since you left it; only on Monday the 20th October last, betwixt the hours of three and four in the afternoon, the sky being very hazy, as it uses to be before a storm of thunder and lightning, there fell a black dust all over the country, tho in greater quantities in some places than in others. It was very much like lampblack, but smelled strongly of sulphur. People in the fields had their faces, hands and linen, blackened by it. It was followed by rain. — Some people assign the cause of it to some extraordinary eruption of Hecla. But I shall trouble you no more about it, as no doubt some of your friends have written to you about it some time ago“. In June 1756, I returned to Zetland: and, upon further inquiry, found what Mr. Brown had written me was attested by Mr. Mitchell, parson of the parish of Terywall, and by several Gentlemen of credit and reputation, who had seen and observed the same phenomenon in different parts of the country at the time above-mentioned. Mr. Brown having omitted to mention, how the wind did blow at the time the black dust was observed, I made particular inquiry about that circumstance, and found it was from the S. W. Which does not seem to favour the opinion, that the dust proceeded from an eruption of mount Hecla, which lies about N. W. from Zetland; unless it may be supposed, that a north wind happening just before had carried this dust to southwest, and the southwest wind immediately following had brought it back to the northward. But, in this case, would not this black dust have been observed in Zetland at its first travelling to the southward? Upon inquiry, I did not hear it was. Thus far I have obeyed your command, which I will always do with pleasure; and if you think it worth while to lay this letter before the Royal Society, I leave you at full liberty to do so, or not, as JÖKULL 30. ÁR 71

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Jökull

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