Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1979, Side 7

Jökull - 01.12.1979, Side 7
the Jan Mayen Ridge running south from Jan Mayen at about 6°—10° W, has been confirmed by geophysical work and drilling to contain sedimen- tary sequences, reaching at least 40 m.y. in age. The shelf The insular shelf around Iceland is mostly at depths of between 100 and 300 m, and its width varies from less than 15 km to more than 120 km, with 80 km being most representative. The shelf is easily distinguishable from the transverse ridges to the east and west, but less so from the active mid-ocean ridges where these join it. The area of the shelf is larger than that of Iceland itself. The character of the shelf and slope shows con- siderable variation around Iceland, as described in three examples below. Off southern and southeastern Iceland, the shelf is narrow, 12—70 km, and the slope is very steep (up to about 15°) out to ocean depths of 1000— 1200 m. According to magnetic results, the outer- most 10 km or so of the shelf consist of sediments, prograding beyond an even steeper edge in the basement. On the inner part of the shelf, sediments are thin. Shallow valleys, cut into the sediments, probably channel large quantities of volcanic ash and glacial erosion products towards deeper ocean basins, and sedimentary drifts (the Katla ridges) occur off the shelf. Off northern Iceland, the major fjords continue as north-trending depressions on the shelf for tens of km. They have probably been shaped by large glaciers, and are now being gradually filled with sediment from land. The deepest of these depressions (Eyjafjördur Deep) is due south of the Kolbeinsey Ridge and appears to originate partly by faulting. West of southwestern Iceland, the shelf is over 120 km wide, and the insular slope is relatively gentle (less than 2°). The insular margin has been extensively modified here by glacial erosion and morainal deposition, with 10—30 km of shelf-edge progradation. A steep basement edge, such as occurs off southeastern Iceland, has not been iden- tified. There is evidence of sediment redistribution in elongated drifts, by the action of bottom cur- rents. SELECTED REFERENCES Bott, M. H. P., 1974: Deep structure, evolution and origin of the Iceland transverse ridge. In Kristjansson, L. (Ed.): Geodynamics of Iceland and the North Atlantic Area: 33—47. D. Reidel Publ. Co. Brooks, C. K., and S. Jakobsson, 1974: Petrochem- istry of the volcanic rocks of the North Atlantic ridge system. In Kristjansson, L. (Ed.): Geody- namics of Iceland and the North Atlantic Area: 139—154. D. Reidel Publ. Co. Egloff, J., and G. L. Johnson, 1978: Erosional and depositional structures of the Southwest Iceland insular margin: thirteen geophysical profiles. In Geological and Geophysical Investigations of Continental Margins, Amer. Assoc. Petrol Geologists Memoir 29: 43—63. Einarsson, P., 1976: Relative location of earth- quakes in the Tjörnes Fracture Zone. Soc. Sci. Icel. Greinar V: 45—60. Fleischer, U., 1974: The Reykjanes Ridge — a summary of geophysical data. In Kristjansson, L. (Ed.): Geodynamics of Iceland and the North Atlantic Area: 17—32. D. Reidel Publ. Co. Fleischer, U., F. Holzkamm, K. Vollbrecht, and D. Voppel, 1974: Die Struktur des Island-Fáröer- Riickens aus geophysikalischen Messungen. Deutsche Hydrogr. Zeitschr. 27: 97—113. Icelandic Hydrographic Office, 1975: Bathymetric maps of the Iceland area, scales 1:1 000 000 and 1:2 500 000. Kristjansson, L., 1976: Central volcanoes on the western Icelandic shelf. Marine Geophys. Res. 2: 285—289. Kristjansson, L., 1976: A marine magnetic survey off southem Iceland. Marine Geophys. Res. 2: 315-326. Kristjansson, L., 1978: Magnetic trends around the Reykjanes Peninsula, SW-Iceland. Report 78- 14, Science Institute, Univ. of Iceland, 11 p. McMaster, R. L., J.-G. Schilling, and P. R. Pinet, 1977: Plate boundary within Tjörnes Fracture Zone on northern Iceland’s insular margin. Nature 269: 663—668. Nilsen, T., 1978: Lower Tertiary laterite on the Iceland-Faeroe Ridge and the Thulean land bridge. Nature 274: 786—789. Pálmason, G., 1974: Insular margins of Iceland. In Burk, C. A., and C. L. Drake, (Eds.): The Geology of Continental Margins: 375—379. Springer Verlag. Saemundsson, K., 1978: Fissure swarms and cen- tral volcanoes of the neovolcanic zones of Ice- land. In Bowes, D. R. and B. E. Leake, (Eds.): Crustal Evolution in Northwestern Britain and JÖKULL 29. ÁR 5
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