Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1970, Side 29

Jökull - 01.12.1970, Side 29
The Evolution of the Drainage System (1904—1965) Infront of Breidamerkurjökull, Iceland R. J. PRICE AND P. J. HOWARTH1, DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAHY, UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW The area of study is located in south-east Iceland (Fig. 1) approximately 80 km west of Höfn. On the southern side of Vatnajökull, glaciers descend from the ice cap almost to sea level. One of these gJaciers, Breidamerkur- jökull, and its proglacial area has been the subject of detailed study by members of the Department of Geography, University of Glas- gow, during the period 1964/1967 (Howarth 1968, Price 1969, Welch 1967, Welch and Ho- warth 1968). This paper is concerned with the whole of the proglacial area of Breidamerkur- jökull. The authors carried out fieldwork in this area during the summers of 1965 and 1966 when Price mapped the area to the west of Jökulsárlón (Fig. 1) and Howarth mapped the area to the east of Jökulsárlón. Breidamerkurjökull is a valley glacier some 20 km in length and generally 10 to 12 km wide which broadens into a lobe towards its terminus to give an ice front nearly 20 km in length. This glacier originates in the extensive accumulation area of Vatnajökull and is fed by several disdnct tributaries. The confining walls of Breidamerkurjökull are high ridges (600—800 m) of extrusive volcanic rocks, mainly basaltic lavas. Since 1890 the front of Fjalls- jökull has retreated westwards and that of Breidamerkurjökull north-westwards, although it was not until 1945 that the two ice fronts became completely separated (Fig. 1). In this paper the development of the drainage system produced during the retreat of the glaciers over the last 61 years will be discussed. All but two of the meltwater channels ob- served in the area of study were cut in the 1) At present, assistant professor, Department of Geography, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. drift deposits. In that part of the area inside the outermost moraine ridge (Fig. 1) most of the fluvioglacial erosion was confined to di- stinct channel systems with individual channels ranging between 10 m and 200 m in width and 1 and 3 m in depth. Only where the channels have been cut through moraine ridges do they exceed 10 m in depth. There are areas of sand- ar2) inside the moraine system on which large numbers of anastomosing channels up to 1 m in depth were observed. Beyond the outermost moraine, formed about 1890, which represents the greatest ex- tent of Breidamerkurjökull in historical times (Thorarinsson 1943, p. 29), fluvioglacial erosion was associated with the development of the drainage systems on the sandar. Presumably the development of the great Breidamerkursandar must be related to the advance and retreat of Breidamerkurjökull on numerous occasions prior to the advance which reached its maxim- um in 1890. Almost certainly, a considerable thickness of sand and gravel would have been deposited in this area when large volumes of meltwater were realised during the eruptions of Öraefajökull in 1362 and 1727 (Thorarins- son 1958). The thickness of the deposits form- ing the present sandur is unknown but it is assumed that the present surface form is the product of fluvioglacial erosion and deposition taking place during the last advance and re- treat of Breidamerkurjökull. The channel systems on these sandar surfaces are complex and represent the changing pattern of the drainage system at the time the ice stood at the position of the 1890 moraine. The drainage system established beyond the moraine system 2) Sandur: Icelandic word (singular) mean- ing outwash plain. Sandar: plural. JÖKULL 20. ÁR 27

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