Náttúrufræðingurinn

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Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1994, Side 52

Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1994, Side 52
■ SUMMARY On the Laki eruptions Preliminary outline The biggest lava-eruption known in history oc- curred the year 1783 in the district of Skafta- fellssýsla southem Iceland. The volcano is a 27 km long fissure running along a 200-260 m wide graben divided in two approximately equally long segments to the SW and NE of the Laki mountain. HlSTORY OF INVESTIGATIONS The first person to visit the craters, to make a preliminary description and a map of the vol- cano was the Icelandic naturalist and physician Sveinn Pálsson in the year 1793. However, his work was not published until 1945. The fírst geologically educated man to visit the crater-row was Amund Helland (1886). He stayed there for 3 days in 1881, made a map of the craters and mesured the altitude of several of them. He is the first to use the name Laki craters and also to realize the existence of some old craters in the row of 1783. Thoroddsen (1894) investigated the whole area during 10 days in 1893, made a geological map and visited part of the crater-row and con- firmed the observations of Helland concerning volcanic activity before the last emption. Sapper (1908) is without doubt the most ex- perienced volcanologist ever to visit the Laki crater. He stayed there for 3 days in 1906 and has the honor of having made, up to now, the most detailed map of approx. 12 km long cen- tral part of the crater-row and the Laki moun- tain. Reck (1910) also stayed at the craters for 3 days and later published some of his observa- tions in his doctoral thesis 1910. He is in fact the last one to deal seriously with investiga- tions of the craters especially. It is clear from the review of the research history up to 1985, a total of less than 20 days have been devoted to special investigations of the Laki craters. New investigations During parts of the summer months 1990-1993 the author of this paper has been working at geological investigations and mapping along the whole crater-row as well as the surrounding lava flows. It is now possible to prove that in Postglacial times, 3 big eruptions have oc- curred on the same eruptive fissure, each of them showing a caracteristic form of eruptive material. The first eruption has produced a row of relatively low craters built up of exclusively black, mixed, frequently lapilli-sized pyro- clastic material. In places, debris flows have been noted supposedly derived from gravita- tional collapse of an eruption column. Pisolites are not infrequent and a great number of xenoliths is characteristic for these craters as well as the fact that they are practically with- out vegetation. The gray moss (Racumitrium) so typical for the lava fields and most of the craters is absent from the black craters. The first eruption is presumed to have oc- curred in lakes and shortly after the deglaciation of the area. Only one big crater of this type, provisionally named Stóri-Svartur (Big-Black) is in the westem part of the erup- tive físsure about 3 km west of Laki. The second eruption, which is perhaps the biggest of them all, is characterized by huge craters built up of mostly red scoriae of all sizes, and sinder. They frequently form roundish hills but in between there are high (60 m or more) craters of thinly layered coarse scoria, evidently deriving from fountain activ- ity, and a lot of big bombs. Some typical lava craters also belong to this emption. Lava flows appear here and there at the side of these cra- ters and are covered by thick strata of pumice from the last emption. They are much more marked as big kipukas frequently more or less covered by pseudocraters. This fact is thought to indicate an unusually high content of gas in the magma. The lava from this emption most probably occurred up to 8000 years ago. The craters are cut by the narrow graben which ac- cordingly was formed after the second eruption but before the last one. The third and last emption occurred in 1783 and lasted 8 months. It is characterized by enormous lava production but relatively insig- nificant quantity of pumice and ash. The lava craters of this eruption penetrate many of the big older scoria craters or intersect them. As to the Laki itself it should be mentioned that it is not a volcano sensu strictu, but a hyaloclastite mountain, cut at the north side by the graben and emptive fissure. So far, no traces of volcanic activity have been found in Laki itself nor the hill to west of it before 1783. PÓSTFANG HÖFUNDAR/AuTHOr’s ADDRESS Jón Jónsson Smáraflöt 42 IS-210 GARÐABÆR 130

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