Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1970, Side 76

Jökull - 01.12.1970, Side 76
Fig. 7. Lava flow near the top of Galtafell (no. 4 in Fig. 4) showing the sharp boundary between a colonnade (base) and an entabla- ture (top). Mynd 7. Skörp skil milli stuðlabergs og kubba- bergs í ungu hraunlagi i Gaítafelli. paper). Joints progressively developing towards the interior of a cooling flow from top and bottom tend to form an irregular jointing pattern where they meet. This may also result in a sort of entablature. A true kubbaberg- type entablature has however also been report- ed from the Tertiary Volcanic Districts of Scot- land and Ireland, the Island of Staffa being a famous example. The same applies to the Columbia River Plateau (Mackin 1961). The rapid cooling indicated by the glassier texture and great thickness of the entablature of the Hreppar lavas strongly suggests aqueous chilling. More conclusive evidence is provided by entablatures observed in the slopes of Galta- fell grading into pillow lava and hyaloclastites (Fig. 4). As shown before the young lavas in the Hreppar all solidified within valleys with rivers flowing along them as indicated by the gravel beds that are often found below the lavas. These rivers may have been dammed up temporarily by tlie lavas and then flooded the valleys with the still partly fluid lavas on bott- om. The lavas which possess an upper chillecl entablature probably mark the channels of such íloods. The rubble of the aa lava surface was already solidified at the time of flooding. The water flooding the lava therefore seems mainly to have acclerated the cooling process and caus- ed extreme thermal stresses within the uncon- solidated portion of the lava, responsible for the extremely hackly jointing. The writer would like to mention two ex- arnples of the formation of entablatures in postglacial lava flows obviously caused by flood- ing shortly after their emplacement both from Jökulsá á Fjöllum in Northern Iceland (Fig. 8). The eruptive fissures of Hljódaklettar and Sveinar (Thorarinsson 1960) cut across the river and have poured lavas into the river bed. Later erosion of these lavas, first recognized as post- glacial by H. Tómasson in 1967 (oral commun- ication), revealed the typical twofold division also present in the Hreppar lavas. It is interesting in connection with this discussion to point out similar processes actu- ally observed during the Lakagígar eruption in 1783. Lava flows of this eruption dammed up the rivers Skaftá and Hverfisfljót. Both were drained out over the lava several months later when a great volume of water had accumulated behind the lava darns. (Eyewitness account of the spectacular phenomena by Jón Steingrims- son publ. 1907). It is uncertain whether text- ures and structures similar to those of the Hreppar lavas resulted there. However accord- ing to Jónsson (oral communication) an en- tablature was formed when some smaller rivers after torrential rain for several days flooded the still advancing lava just west of Kirkju- baejarklaustur. As a result the progress of the lava was stopped. The entablature is revealed in sections along the Skaftá at Eldmessutangi. The theory of aqueous chilling causing the formation of entablatures is by no means a new one. Waters (1960), in cliscussing entabla- 74 JÖKULL 20. ÁR

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