Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1957, Side 30

Jökull - 01.12.1957, Side 30
single ogives are inclined dirt layers, like the thrust planes, though not necessarily caused by thrusting, and that the distinctive profile of both is the product of ablation on the steeply dipping dirt band. Ives and King consider that the ogives could be formed by regenerated stratification in the avalanche material. A third glacier in Öræfi which possesses un- usual ogives is Falljökull. Like Morsárjökull it is a double glacier fed by two icefalls, and each strearn has a different type of ogive (see fig. 4). The northern side is fed both by a narrow icefall and an avalanche fan; below the latter are very thin and dirty multiple bands with almost no white space between them, outcropping at the surface some distance from the foot of the avalanche fan. Below the narrow icefall are four gentle waves succeeded by single ogives, which are narrow and indistinct, irregularly spaced and often merging or broken up. They are generally far too close to each other to be annual in origin. In width and profile these resemble the single ogives on Morsárjökull. The southern stream of the double glacier is fed solely by a very steep, wide icefall, at one side of which apparent thrust planes were seen, bringing up dirt to the lateral moraine; however, these were fol- lowed round into the centre of the glacier where they had all the appearance of true ogives. In the middle of the glacier very large ogives were found (fig 5), also of the “single” Fig. 3. One of the single ogives below the avalanche fan of Morsárjökull. Medial moraine and multiple ogives in the background. Einföld svigða á Morsárjökli 28 Fig. 4. A sketch of Falljökull. The lines repre- senting the ogives show only their type and direction.They are not actual surveyed positions. Riss af Falljökli. type, but very wide (8 m) and dirty, with a most pronounced break of slope and raised white bluff up glacier of the ogives. At the foot of this icefall there are a number of longi- tudinal crevasses, in which one could see cur- ved dirt lines coming to the surface along the lines suggested by the theoretical lines of maximum shear stress (7). At this point the information we hacl glean- ecl was as follows: there were two main types of ogives — the “single” type, which was nar- row (often only one or two metres) and very dirty, and which was in profile similar to the thrust planes identified at glacier snouts, and there were the “multiple” ogives that were wide (30—130 m on Svínafellsjökull) ancl faint, and were made up of five or more narrow bands that were almost invisible from the sur- face of the glacier. An explanation (regenera- ted stratification) was available for the ogives below the avalanche fan of Morsárjökull, but would not satisfactorily explain the presence of either single or multiple ogives below ice- falls, furthermore, the avalanche fan on Fall- jökull was producing multiple ogives. Several writers (8, 9) have remarked on the coexistence of ogives and “pressure waves” be- neath an icefall, and waves were found beneath the icefalls of Svínafellsjökull, the western stream of Morsárjökull and the northern ice-

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Jökull

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