Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1975, Side 45

Jökull - 01.12.1975, Side 45
Fig. 5. The ash layers in the bank near Skammá, in a matrix of sandy silt. The lowest part of the visible deposit is 8 cm of fine black ash, overlain by 12 cm of rather thin (0.5—1 cm) layers of co- arse white ash separated by sandy silt. Mynd 5. Öskulög í barði ndlægt Skammá. Neðst sjást 8 cm af fingerðri svartri ösku, yfir henni liggja 12 cm af fremur þunnum (0,5—1 cm) lög- um af grófum hvitum vikri með millilögum af sandblöndnum leir. lower layer of rather mixed stone composition. The relief of the area north of the Nordlinga- fljót is noteworthy, since the low, rolling hil- locks from Kleppar to a point opposite to Vopnalág and thence through Thorvaldsháls, and for some kilometres north of the river have summits in a height range 410—430 m. It may be suggested that this is an area in which the original overlying basalts have been entirely stripped off and the softer materials below selectively eroded. These softer materials, which may be partly tillites, partly sedimentary sand- stones and conglomerates, may appear to be deposits when they are, in fact, bedrock re- sulting from an earlier phase of deposition. An anomalous deposit was examined just west of the Skammá stream on the south shore of Arnarvatn stóra. This stream flows from Rétta- vatn at 549 m and then through two small lakes just below this level before falling steeply about 8 m over the escarpment into Arnarvatn in a rapid about 25 m in length which is com- paratively little incised into the escarpment especially in its lower part. About 100 m west of the rapid and 7 m above the level of Arnar- vatn thick layers of ash occur in tlie eroded bank of soil forming the edge of the escarp- ment. About 20 cm of this ash could be un- covered, the upper layers being of coarse white ash, with a thick layer of fine black ash below, but the deposits were well back in the bank in a hollow probably excavated by sheep and it was not considered advisable to remove the very large area of turf required to obtain a clear section (Fig. 5). Such a thickness of ash is to- tally uncharacteristic of tliis area in which ash layers were being particularly looked for, but none found: even some distance to the south- west, at Álftakrókur, the ash layers found were a millimetre or two thick. It can be suggested that this thick deposit of ash is the result of collection in the drainage area of Réttavatn and transport by the Skammá into an Arnarvatn with a level only a little below that of Réttavatn and deposition on to a delta at the entrance to the lower lake. In that case, the rather immature fall on the pre- sent Skammá is due to the relatively recent fall in level of Arnarvatn. ICE MOVEMENT Ice scratches in the area summarised from the geological map (1965), Atkins (1971) and from the author’s observations are shown in Fig. 1. It is clear that the main direction of ice movement over the area was from a mainly east-north-easterly direction, which is maintain- ed into the Borgarfjördur—Mýrar Lowland, to the south-west (Kjartansson, 1955, p. 159). The situation to the north of Langjökull is uncer- JÖKULL 25. ÁR 43

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