Náttúrufræðingurinn

Volume

Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1966, Page 53

Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1966, Page 53
NÁTTÚRUFRÆÐINGURINN 47 sand intercalates two basaltlayers. Tlie underlying basalt (C in fig. 1.) is amygdoidal, its cavities filled mainly witli zeolites, the overlaying one (A) is compact and 3—5 m thick. In this layer we observed numerous tubular moulds (Fig. 2) and as far as we could find out during our very short stay, tliese tubes liave been left by trunks of trees buried by the lava. Common diameter of these tubes is 25 to 35 cm. One of the tubes was filled with green doughy stuff, supposed to be celadonite. The trees buried here were probably conifers. II. Some words about Eldgjá. In a previous paper (Eldgjá, Náttúrufræðingurinn 25, 1955, pp. 148—153) the author dividecl the volcanic activity which formed the northern part of the famous fissure volcano Eldgjá (Fig. 3) in three main phases: 1. A rnainly explosive phase forming a layer of teplira and tephratic lava 2. An effusive phase producing enormous quantities of lava 3. A mixed phase exlruding a small amount of lava and forming craters along the bottom of tlie chasm. In the light of later experience won while watching the Askja eruption 1901 and the effusive phases of the Surtsey eruption the author now realizes tliat the teplira layer produced by the Eldgjá eruption resulted mainly from a very vigorous lava fountain activity ancl not from explosive activity. The garland contours of the northern part of Eldgjá are — as formerly main- tained by G. Robson in his unpublished monograpli of Eldgjá — to a great extent the residt of slipping of rock from tlie walls of the chasm, although explosive activity at the very beginning of the eruption may have played some role. During the summer of 1966 the author observed such slipping causing garland contours of the outer wall of a semicircular chasm formed on the out- side of the crater on the now disappeared island Jólnir SW of Surtsey (Fig. 5). III. Granite boulders found on the beach near Búlandshöfdi. The author describes a big granite boulder (weight about 600 pounds) found on the beach near the farm Búlandshöfdi on the north shore of Snæfellsnes, West Iceland (Fig. 6). The boulder was more likely brought to this place by drift ice tlian by boat. The origin and transport of a flint boulder (Fig. 8), brought up from the sea bottom of Breiðafjörður, 7 km N of Rif, is also discussed. Possibly that boulder was carried by drift ice too, althougli other possibilities are not ex- cluded. Only twice since the settlement of Iceland 1100 years ago is the arctic drift ice reported to have reached the Breidafjördur area. Conditions may, however, liave been more favourable for ice drift into that area during cold periods in prehistoric time, such as the Dryas periods or the first centuries of the Subatlantic time. A systematic study of íoreign rocks on Icelandic beaches and on the slielf is desireable.
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