Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1983, Side 97

Jökull - 01.12.1983, Side 97
Fig. 9. Glacial cols at just over 400 m.a.s.l. on Há- degisfjall (right) and Skessa (left) opposite the town of Búdareyri in Reydarfiördur. (cf. Fig. 1). — Photo G. Sigbj. Mynd 9. Jökulaxlir í rúmlega 400 my.s. í HádegisJjalli (t.h.) og Skessu (t.v) á móti Búðareyrarkauptúni við Reyðarjj'órð. (Sbr. 1. mynd) —Ljósm. G. Sigbj. spite of the fact that the coast there is directly connected to the central highlands. This feature is especially poorly developed west of Hornafjördur, where it is hardly possible to talk about well deve- loped glacially eroded valleys, except where the present glaciers, Hoffellsjökull, Breidamerkurjökull and Skeidarárjökull flow today. On the other hand marine eroded features, wave cut cliffs and promon- tories are very well developed and little eroded by encroaching glaciers. The age of strata does not seem to really matter, except for the very youngest. This points without doubt, to the fact that in pre- vious glaciations the glaciers here have not attained great thickness or extent. The glaciation limits have hardly been lower than 400-600 m a. s. 1. and glac- iers have either melted on the slopes beneath the moutains or in the case of piedmont glaciers at the valley or fjord mouths, where calving could also have played a part in the ablation. The eastern fjords and southeastern Iceland have therefore not been unlike the coast ofSpitsbergen and many other arctic islands today. I consider that a greatly reduc- ed precipitation from that of the present could be a satisfactory explanation for this. Observations on the geomorphology of south- eastern Iceland and the eastern fjords suggest de- cidedly that marine erosion as well as alpine glaciers are mainly responsible for the landscape which we find there today. GLACIER THICKNESS AND ICE FREE AREAS Glacier thickness may be estimated from the geo- morphological forms left by the glacier, which again to some extent depend on the rate of flow of the ice. The thickness of those glaciers which formed the alpine landforms, covering a quarter ofthe country, has been touched upon (Figs. 3 and 4). The land- forms only give an estimation of the mean thickness of the glaciers which formed them, but I do not consider that there is any reason to conclude that those glaciers have ever been much thicker. It is possible that they have at some time reached a greater ice thickness, when conditions of glacier formation were at a maximum, but erosional feat- ures left by such glaciers should be found since erosive capability rapidly increases with ice thick- ness. Ifone considers the distributionofalpine areas in Fig. 3, it can be seen that their position around the country suggests that glacier thickness in the centr- al highlands has never been, at least in late Quater- nary time, so great that the outflowing glaciers from there have buried these areas, but rather that the glacial valleys and fjords have always managed to transport the glacial ice away. It suggests further therefore that glacier flow from the central high- lands has continually adapted to the landscape and this is true of the ice centres too as pointed out by Trausti Einarsson (1977). In other words, there have therefore continuously been many ice centres and ice ridges in the main highland areas and glacial flow has been from there in all directions or similar to what can be seen in the present glaciers. The height of móberg mountains has been used as an indication of the minimum thickness of the glaciers (Guðmundur Kjartansson 1943, Kristján Ste- mundsson 1979). I think it is likely that this gives not only an idea of minimum thickness but also the approximate maximum thickness. A superficial ob- servation of the structure of móberg mountains in the southern higlands of the country south of the Tungnaá river and Thjórsá river show that nearly all those eruptions they formed in, reached above the glaciers, since they are first and foremost built of hyaloclastics, pillow lava formations being infre- quent. On the other hand the proportion of pillows and cubic jointed basalts increases greatly, to the north of the T ungnaá river and elsewhere within the central highlands. This suggests a considerably JÖKULL 33. ÁR 95
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