Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 17.09.1999, Qupperneq 5

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 17.09.1999, Qupperneq 5
Lögberg-Heimskringla » Föstudagur 17. september 1999 • 5 What’s happening in... Canada lceland Vatnabyggd Icelandic golf tournament I I Thor and Gwen Arnason show off prizes and a trophy worthy ofwinning. Photo courtesy Joan Eyolfson Cadham Joan Eyolfson Cadham Foam Lake, SK The Second Annual Vatnabyggd Icelandic Open Golf Touraament was staged this July with a air of hesi- tant expectancy. “This year,” organizers said, “will signal the beginning of a new tradition of the official end of the unveiling party.” The First Annual Icelandic Open (participants must be Icelandic, be mar- ried to an Icelander, or have touched an Icelander recently) was held as part of the celebrations surrounding the official unveiling of the Vatnabyggd memorial statue to honour Icelandic pioneers. The event was planned to provide an extra activity for people who had driven long distances for the Saturday formal cere- monies. Organizers were not sure whether a toumament on its own would attract a crowd. However, 60 golfers turned out to play 18 holes of four-ball best-ball golf. eighty-two people turned out for supper and the trophy presentation at the Wynyard golf course, the weather was spectacular, the drink cart made more rounds than the golfers did, and the day ended with the hushed excitement of a sudden-death plaýoff between last year’s champions and this year’s new leaders. The tournament drew golfers from Saskatoon, Moosomin, Yorkton, Regina, Calgary, North Battleford, Kwakatoose, Wadena, Mozart, Wadena, Elfros, Foam Lake, and Wynyard. The tie came as a surprise, announced while golfers and their friends were relaxing in the Club house and waiting for supper. Followed by all the golfers who could pile into golf carts, Dale Gudmundson, Paul and Serena Lendzyk, and Judy Tokarchuk squared off against Thor and Gwen Arnason, Mitch Blyth, and Ryan Melsted. Thor sunk the winning putt after a three-hole playoff and an exciting exhi- bition of golíing excellence described by one Icelandic participant as “Maturity and treachery over youth and enthusiasm.” Next year’s Millennium Icelandic Open will be held at the Wynyard golf course on July 9. Organizer Dave Shepherd said that, given the momen- tous nature of the year, and the high degree of prestige attainable by playing in a Millennium tournament, 80 golfers would be accommodated. Looking Forward Continued from page 1 relations between Iceland and Canada very good. “For example we work closely together in NATO and now recently in the area of the North Polar Council. Presently an important issue awaits solution, namely air communi- cations between the countries, which we will increase and improve. For example I would like to see flights between Iceland and Western Canada become more frequent; by doing so we would encourage increased investments on behalf of both countries. Today we agreed to work vigorously on these matters but we also discussed how to increase our cooperation in the political arena.” Mr. Axworthy expressed his pleas- ure over the Icelandic Government’s decision to locate a full time Icelandic diplomat in Canada, a Special Envoy, “where very good work is done, on which we want to build.” Mr. Axworthy said it had particularly caught his atten- tion when Halldór Asgrímsson informed him that his visit was proba- bly the first official visit by a Canadian Foreign Minister. “And I am very pleased to have the honour of being the first,” the Canadian Foreign Minister said. “I come here from Manitoba where, as you know, a high number of Canadians of Icelandic descent live who play an important part in the life there. We want to honour these strong ties by this visit.” “I look forward to the celebrations next year, and of course we want to pre'- pare well for the arrival of your President, Prime Minister, and Foreign Minister to Canada,” Axworthy added. “The purpose of these visits is to focus on the fact that Iceland and Canada have actually had friendly relations for a thousand years.” Katla eruption expected Hidden beneath the Mýrdals- glacier ice cap Iies one of Iceland’s major central volcanoes: Katla. It is dominated by a 10 km wide and 700 m deep caldera and the associated fissure reaches some 70 km to the northeast, where it includes the Eldgjá fissure. Eruptions in the volcano are particular- ly instructive for an understanding of the relationship between volcanic activ- ity and glacier bursts. There have been about twenty eruptions in the Katla sys- tem in historical times, all of basaltic magma. Recent eruptions originating beneath the ice have been phreatomag- matic, and generated major tephra plumes, that have caused extensive ash fall in Iceland. Each Katla eruption is accompanied by a huge flood of melt- water, tephra, mud, and ice, that sweep over the Mýrdalssangur plain to the east of the volcano, adding thick depoits of water-transported tephra to the plain and extending out the coastline where they enter the sea. There is also an extensive geothermal field in the sub- glacial caldera, and its discharge is the smelly “Fúlilækur” (foul stream) or Jökulsá on Sólheimasandur. Presently there is concern in Iceland for yet another Katla eruption. Caldera have formed at the rim of the Katla crater, indicating heat under the glacier. The following is taken from an interview with a pilot who recently flew over the glacer to inspect developments there. The caldera at Mýrdal’s Glacier have deepened and the cracks enlarged. The tenth caldera is forming and possi- bly the eleventh. This was discovered during a flight, made by Reynir Ragnarsson, over Mt. Katla on August 24. Reynir last flew over the glacier nine days ago and he reported the changes in the glacier since that time are visible. “It appears that all of the caldera have deepened and the circular cracks enlarged. A new caldera appears to be forming further north in the gla- cier, although circular cracks have not formed yet,” said Reynir Ragnarsson after his inspection flight on August 24. Most of the ten caldera are located at the crater rim of Katla. Translated from Morgunblaðið <H5 ii -HnH* Rin* mu' 'ns'hci&t mri m rwtiír NtirrRit-m & rmt -t m 'ní'kwnMi-

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