Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1982, Side 97

Jökull - 01.12.1982, Side 97
Fig. 2. Pen and ink drawing ofj. Hospers, made by Oddur Björnsson at Háls, N-Iceland in 1950. Mynd. 2. Pennateikning afjan Hospers ejtir Odd Bjöms- son. were taken from scattered outcrops, the potential of Iceland for the mapping of polarity reversals was not realized until the field work of J. Hospers (Fig. 2) began in 1950. By 1950, the geology of Iceland had been studied by several eminent geologists, but the emphasis in their work was naturally on the active volcanic, tectonic and geothermal manifestations of the country. In older regions, individual localities of plant and marine fossils, alteration minerals, intrus- •ons, and glacial deposits had received most attent- •on. Of course, no radiometric dates were available °n Icelandic rocks; theoldest fossil occurrences had long been considered to be of Miocene age, but the opinion of an Eocene age grew stronger during the forties to middle sixties. Systematic mapping of stratigraphy in the pile of ílood basalts had not started in 1950, and it may indeed have seemed a dull and difficult taskgiven the apparent uniformity of lava flows in the pile. J. HOSPERS During the 1950’s R. W. van Bemmelen and M. G. Rutten from Utrecht carried out extensive field mapping of Plio-Pleistocene extrusive and glacial formations in Iceland. In 1950 they were joined by J. Hospers, astudent from Utrecht who was beginn- ing graduate research at Cambridge University. He took part in their mapping eífort in the Akureyri to Mývatn area, including both geological and gravity work. and collected 25 samples from lavas in Ljósa- vatnsskarð for paleomagnetic measurements (Hos- pers 1951). Van Bemmelen intended to find if magnetic intensity variations could be used for stratigraphic studies in lavas (J. Hospers, pers. comm. 1982). In 1951 Hospers continued his paleo- magnetic work in Iceland, collecting that summer altogether 633 hand samples. Some of these he mea- sured in the field only, using a portable vertical-field magnetometer. Specimens from others were mea- sured in Cambridge (except for sediment samples which were measured in Blackett’s laboratory in Manchester). Those oollections that were reported in Hospers’ published papers included five Hekla lava flows, eight other postglacial flows, 65 Plio- Pleistocene and Tertiary flows from Snaefellsnes, over 50 flows from Esja and Hvalfjördur and 80 from Ljósavatnsskarð, as well as over 40 samples of sediments from five different Icelandic localities. Collections were also made e. g. from Iavas in Tjör- nes and from the Palagonite formation in the Eyja- fjöll area. Hospers’ thesis (1953a) and papers on these magnetic measurements from Iceland and elsew- here (1953b, 1954a, b, c, d, 1955) had considerable impact upon the geoscience community and were widely quoted. His laboratory measurements of remanencedirections yielded self-œnsistent results which showed e.g. that the mean direction of the field since the Pliocene approximated that of an axial geocentric dipole; it followed that polar wandering in this time had been much slower than some authors had suggested. They also showed that the lavas occurred in zones of several consecutive flows which had alternating polarities but were otherwise similar in overall mean directions, in other magnetic properties, and in gross chemistry. (The term “reverse” magnetization was first used by Hospers in the above papers; he was also the first to calculate pole positions from paleomagnetic directions). As there was considerable variation on the character of the lavas within each zone, Hospers JÖKULL 32. ÁR 93
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