Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1985, Side 41

Jökull - 01.12.1985, Side 41
Fig. 8. Deposit of layered sands and gravels, N end of Norðurdalur, much contorted and showing signs of frost wedging. See 80/9 in Fig. 6 for lower material and 80/10 for the thinner covering layer of less well sorted deposit. — 8. mynd. Setlög í Norðurdal. diverted away from the immediate area, to return to the ice margin once the pressure was released. In the same way, the high ground of Hafrafell and Staffell to the E would have funnelled the ice stream, as can be seen from the broad, swampy col between Hafrafell and Rangárhnjúkur, but among all the signs of ice erosion in this col, the glaciated surface on which they occur is cut by fairly wide and steep-sided channels, (Figs. 2 and 7), which contain peat deposits which have been drained for cultivation. These could be channels carrying water diverted away from the rock masses both to E and W, cutting into the line of the dykes in the country rock, (Fig. 3). The northerly trend of channels along the edge of the high ground of Fljótsdalsheiði and Fellaheiði is con- tinued into the lowland to the N, characterised by lines of rock ridges separated by long lakes and swampy hollows. Lagarfljót flows through the E side of the lowland in a probably adventitious course through the ridges as far as Lagarfoss, and Jökulsá á Brú runs parallel to the W in a similar situation. Even on the top of the Fellaheiði plateau, on the E side of which it appears that some of the channels end, as mentioned above, there is evidence of water flow to the NW of the lake Sandvatn stóra. This lake is at present drained by the Rangá to the N, in a very irregular course, but to the NW of the lake there is a channel system cut in the central divide of the plateau. The most noteworthy feature of this is the angular notch, (Tröllagjót on the 1:100 000 map), with lowest point about 590 m, from which the ground slopes fairly gently W to Sandvatn at 569 m, but very steeply down to the E, (Fig. 10). This notch cannot be associated with any recent drainage from Sandvatn stóra because the ridge falls below 590 m just to the N, and it must be assumed that ice covered the ridge and the area which is now the N part of Sandvatn when the notch was formed. A col at 660 m on the ridge leads to Sandvatn Iitla lying in one of the channels, which then leads into a wide, deep trench, which eventually debouches into Jökul- dalur, (Fig. 1). The Sandá stream, a tributary of which could soon behead Rangá just N of Sandvatn stóra, is cutting deeply into the older trench, the end of which lies above the Giljahólar feature in Jökuldalur. From the evidence of air photographs this trench could have held a glacier tongue although this is not apparent on the ground. (c) Deposition. It is often difficult to interpret deposits either by appearance or by their location in occasional exposures, so as many as possible of the samples collected have been subjected to mechanical analysis. Even quite large samples, however, have such a wide range of particle sizes that it is difficult to show them adequately in some cases, while it is often very difficult to separate out individual layers in some of the stratifjed deposits of sands and gravels where layers are thin. In the very poorly sorted deposits one large stone can affect the analysis of quite a large sample. Of the few large deposits of unsorted material, the most important seems to be that found from the N end JÖKULL 35. ÁR 39
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Jökull

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