Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1979, Side 53

Jökull - 01.12.1979, Side 53
strata (Table 1). The most intensely drilled thermal area in Plio-Pleistocene strata is at Reykir in Mos- fellssveit, SW-Iceland. The production area is in a heavily tilted and blockfaulted zone just outside a two million year old caldera. Basaltic lavas form 40—70% of the strata and these are intercalated by thick and thin beds of subglacially erupted pillow lavas and hyaloclastites as well as detrital beds. Table 2 shows the occurrence of aquifers in the different rock types in drillholes in the area. It is apparent that large aquifers are by far more likely to occur at the contacts of lithological units than in lavas alone or in subaquatic volcanics alone. Several individual 2 km wells in the area can give 100 1/s with pumping and a drawdown of a few tens of m. .— The largest natural hot spring in Iceland is at Deildartunga in Reykholtsdalur, W-Iceland. The strata is of Tertiary age and mostly of basaltic lavas, but extrapolation from surface outcrops in- dicates that at 0.5—1 km depth under the hot spring area sediments may amount to 30% of the strata. There is a 1.4 km long line of hot springs spread along a NW-trending relatively young frac- ture. The Deildartunga hot spring, with a dis- charge of about 180 1/s of boiling water, is at the northern end of the line where the fracture cuts a NE-trending dyke and an associated fault. The Kleppjárnsreykir hot spring, with a discharge of about 70 1/s of boiling water, is at the southern end of the line and close to this spring the fracture also cuts a NE-trending dyke. The total discharge along the line is about 253 1/s, which shows that the numerous hot springs along the line between the big end members have insignificant discharge. There are several other tectonically controlled lines of hot springs in the Reykholtsdalur area, some of which are associated with historically active faults. There was movement on one of these faults (Helgavatn fault) during an earthquake episode in 1974 and a hot spring disappeared for about 3 weeks and then reappeared with hotter water and greater discharge than before. The thermal waters of the low temperature areas are characteristically alkaline with dissolved solids of the order of 200—400 ppm. The composition is dominantly governed by the temperature of the water and the rock type which it flows through and leaches. There has been noted a general although subtle increase of the chlorine content of the ther- mal waters towards the coast indicating some in- filtration of seawater into the strata. Table 3 shows the chemical composition of typical waters from the low temperature areas. Carbonate springs (both cold and warm) are found in a few localities in Tertiary and Plio-Pleistocene strata and most commonly in the vicinity of deeply eroded central volcanoes. The carbon dioxide is considered to be mostly of juvenile origin. Geysers (erupting springs) can at present be in- spected in two low temperature areas; Arhver in the Tertiary strata of Reykholtsdalur, W-Iceland, erupts irregularly a meter or two, whereas Ystihver in the Plio-Pleistocene strata of Reykjadalur, N- Iceland, erupts at a few minutes interval up to about five meters. A few erupting springs in the low temperature areas have been captured for utili- zation. TABLE 2. Occurrence of aquifers in the different rock tyþes of 29 dnll holes (800— 2043 m deep) in the Reykir thermal area (from Tómasson et'al, 1975). Rock type: Lavas ............................................. Hyaloclastites1 ................................... Dolerites ......................................... Lavas + hyaloclastites1 ........................... Lavas + dolerites ................................. Hyaloclastites1 + dolerites........................ 1) The term hyaloclastite is here used in a collec- tive sense for all subaquatic volcanic products, thus comprising pillow lavas, pillow breccias, and Aquifers Total < 2 l/s 2—20 1/s > 20 1/s number 44 27 2 73 29 12 4 45 1 1 2 53 38 20 111 13 1 3 17 5 2 1 8 tuffs. Included in this group are also reworked hyaloclastites and detrital beds. JÖKULL 29. ÁR 51
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