Náttúrufræðingurinn

Årgang

Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1958, Side 30

Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1958, Side 30
172 NÁTTÚRUFRÆÐINGURINN ments, globules, veins and dikes o£ a more or less crystalline basalt. These rocks are of Late Pleistocene age. The most striking features of the móberg landscape are: (1) its lack or slight development of surface drainage owing to the permeability of the bed- rock and resulting in little erosion except by the wind; (2) numerous serrated mountain ridges running all in the same direction within each móberg area, and (3) small, steep-sided, isolated plateaux (tablemountains) elongated in the same direction. Both kinds of mountains consist almost exclusively of mó- berg, except for the tops of many of the plateaux, which are usually covered by sheets of lava. Such sheets are more rarely found on the tops of the ridges. As to the origin of these morphological features there are chiefly two dif- ferent theories, that of vertical displacement and that of subglacial accumu- lation. According to the first theory the móberg mountains are strips of the earth’s crust that have either been lifted above their surroundings (Sonder 1938) or remained when these subsided (Reck 1921—22, Nielsen 1933). The second theory maintains that the móberg magma was extrucled (or „in- truded") subglacially into vaults or hollows melted into or through the ice- sheet by volcanic heat, and that by this process the new material was moulded between the walls of ice into almost the present shape of the mountains. The hollows were fillecl with melt-water which caused the magma to solidify into móberg and pillow-lavas rather than into (normal) flows of lava. The ridges owe their shape to linear magma vents and the plateaux to more central ones. The flows of lava covering the flat tops of some of the móberg mountains are interpreted as having been produced subaerially when the mountains had grown sufficiently in height to reach above the surface of the melt-water. This view was set forth as a hypotliesis on the origin of the morphology in the móberg area of S. W. Iceland by the author (Kjartansson 1943). After- wards, much the same origin was suggested by W. H. Mathews (1947, 1952) for several flat-topped mountains („tuyas") in British Columbia. Then this view — in full agreement with my hypothesis as outlined above — was ex- pressed by Bemmelen and Rutten (1955) for the mountains of the móberg area of North Iceland. All these authors seem to have come to their conclu- sions independently of each other and of my hyothesis which had been published in Icelandic ancl is not referred to in their papers. The accumulation theory is applicable also to the móberg area of Middle S. Iceland, or at least to the northeastern half of it (the Tungnáröræfi) including Langisjór, as well as to the two other móberg areas of Iceland. However, the Middle South Area differs from the two others in the foll- owing respects: (1) All tlie mountains are of the ridge type, none being tablemountains. This sliows that volcanic activity was exclusively linear in this area throughout the time of its formation, which took place during the last glaciation. In fact, the activity has maintained this character also in postglacial time. (2) None of the mountains are capped with lava sheets, and normal flows of lava seem not to occur in the móberg formation of this area (between Skaftá ancl Tungná). This indicates such a heavy glaciation of this area as

x

Náttúrufræðingurinn

Direkte link

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Náttúrufræðingurinn
https://timarit.is/publication/337

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.