Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1979, Side 6

Jökull - 01.12.1979, Side 6
Fig. 1. Iceland and the surrounding ocean area. The central zones of the Reykjanes and the Kol- beinsey (Iceland-Jan Mayen) ridges are shown, as well as anomaly lineations on these ridges. Anomaly ages: 5 is 9—10 m.y., 6 is 19—20 m.y., 13 is about 36 m.y. and 20 is about 46 m.y. Depths in fathoms. (After Talwani and Eldholm, 1977) basement highs extending SE towards the northern end of the active volcanic zone in Axarfjördur (17° W). Considerable seismic activity of a transform fault character is associated with both extensions of the Kolbeinsey Ridge on the Iceland shelf, reaching even as far west as to the recently extinct N-S Skagi volcanic zone at 20° W. As a landscape feature, this transform fault is trivially small in comparison with many of the North Atlantic fracture zones, but gravity results indicate the presence of a sizable WNW-trending sediment-filled trough in its southern part, close to shore. The linear magnetic Anomaly 5 west of the Kolbeinsey Ridge (Fig. 1) is known to extend at least to 66° N and can thus be regarded as essen- tially continuous through the Iceland area. East of the ridge, on the other hand, we encounter similar cornplexities as in the case of Reykjanes Ridge: the Anomaly 5 lineation becomes indistinct south of 67° N, but its continuation may reach the coast at 16—17° N, i.e. at the active volcanic zone. Basalts of about Anomaly 5 age are known to outcrop in Tjörnes nearby, as well as in the fjords of eastern Iceland, but detailed research is needed to follow these continuously through all the eastern Iceland area by aeromagnetic lineations and/or surface mapping. Differences between Reykjanes and the Kol- beinsey ridges include the fact that the transition from the latter to the Iceland shelf area is more abrupt than off Reykjanes, both in topography and in basalt chemistry. Certain large scale V-shaped topographic lineations on both ridges, interpreted by some as evidence of pulsing flow of material from a mantle plume under Iceland, are better developed and at a narrower angle on the Reykja- nes Ridge, which also has much less sedimentary cover within 100 km of the crest. Inactive ridges The broad inactive ridges or swells extending between the Lower Tertiary volcanic areas of East Greenland and Northwest Britain were for a long time considered to represent a foundered land bridge. Since the 1960’s, however, many have viewed the swells as being the continuous trace of the same mantle plume activity as has created Ice- land. Similarities between Iceland and these trans- verse ridges, setting them apart from typical North Atlantic ocean floor areas, include their large crustal thickness, geochemical features, poor deve- lopment of magnetic lineations, and the occurrence of a number of central volcanoes, inferred from localized gravity and magnetic anomalies of several km extent. The land bridge hypothesis has recently been revived in modified form by the discovery of lateritic soil within basalt basement in a Glomar Challenger core at 1300 m below sea level on the Iceland-Faeroe Ridge. The original mantle plume trace hypothesis has also been modified, as researchers working on the Iceland-Faeroe-Scotland ridges and associated banks now tend to divide them into blocks, some of which may be of continental character. The block arrangement is largely due to a major westward shift in the location of the rift axis, but the timing of this shift on the Iceland-Faeroe Ridge is not quite certain. It is most likely that the mantle plume moved to its present location about 27 m.y. ago, to begin building up the E-W aligned Iceland block. This is also the time when rifting ceased at the Aegir Ridge in the Norwegian Sea and moved to 10—12 m.y. older crust at the Kolbeinsey Ridge, splitting off in the process a slice of the Greenland continental margin of about 100 km in width. This slice, now 4 JÖKULL 29. ÁR
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