Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1970, Side 75

Jökull - 01.12.1970, Side 75
Fig. 6. Lava flows forming the summit of Galtafell show twofokl division in a lower thin col- onnade and an upjrer thick entablature. View towards north. Mynd 6. Kubbabergslög í Gajtafelli. Lindal (posthumously published 1964) describ- ed interglacial lavas in Húnavatnssýsla, North- ern Iceland, that apparently formed under similar conditions as those in Hreppar. In the Icelandic literature the irregularly columnar division lias been named kubbaberg (boxrock) a term first proposed by Líndal. Tomkeieff (1940) in his description of the basalt flows in the Giant’s Causeway district used the term colonnade for the lower unit of some flows there with straight vertical columns and entablature for the upper unit with curved and twisted columns. These names are adopted here not considering the origin which may be quite different. As a rule the entablatures and colonnades of the Hreppar flows meet along a fairly sharp boundary deep within the lower lialf of the flows (Fig. 6 and 8). This indicates that cooling from the top of the flows giving rise to the entablature proceeded much faster than cooling from the base which produced the colonnade. Different rate of cooling within tlie colonnade and the entablature of the Hreppar flows is also evident from the entablature rock being darker and of a more íinegrained and glassier texture than the colonnade (Plate I, B and C). Such textural difference has not been noted in the Giant’s Causeway examples (Spry 1962). Another difference may be the much rnore pro- nounced hackly jointing of the entablature in the Hreppar examples. This probably indicates a different mode of origin. Spry (1962) favours an explanation of the Giant’s Causeway llows, based on an irregular stress distribution in the centre of the flows even though tlie isotherm pattern is comparatively simple. He assumes that movement of a still fluid interior, taking place after the formation of a thick upper and lower layer, could produce a stress pattern necessary for the formation of an entablature. This explanation also applies to examples de- scribed by Waters (1960) from the Columbia River Plateau (cf. Fig. 1 and Plate 1 of his JÖKULL 20. ÁR 73

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Jökull

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