Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1984, Side 10

Jökull - 01.12.1984, Side 10
Björnsson 1982, 1983) assumes that heat extrac- tion from the magma takes place by penetration of water into cooling magma, most likely in high level intrusions. The apparent recent shift in geothermal activity from Grímsvötn towards the west would best be explained by a shift in intrus- ive activity (Björnsson 1983). For a magmatic system with a 10 km2 areal extent the solidifica- tion front would progress at 5 m/yr. Further complications arise with attempts to relate Grímsvötn to the surrounding area and other eruptions. Comparison with ice free volca- nic areas and satellite photographs suggest that the Grímsvötn volcano is a part of an elongated volcanic system consisting of fissures and hyaloc- lastite ridges similar to other such systems in Iceland (Jakobsson 1979). Suggestions about the extent of the Grímsvötn system vary. The erup- tion of the Laki craters in 1783—84 may have been caused by lateral magma flow from reser- voirs below Grímsvötn (Saemundsson 1978, Sigurdsson and Sparks 1978) which would extend the system about 70 kilometres to the south-west (Figure 1). This suggestion is supported by Jakobsson (1979) who includes Thórdarhyrna volcano in this system. Larsen (1982) suggested on the basis of chemical similarities that Gríms- vötn and Kverkfjöll, a central volcano at the northern margin of the ice sheet belong to the same volcanic system while Saemundsson (1978) and Jóhannesson (1984) show them as three sepa- rate systems, Grímsvötn, Kverkfjöll and Thór- darhyrna (Figure 1). Recently a number of sam- ples from the Lakagígar eruption of 1783—1784 were analyzed in a similar way as the Grímsvötn samples (Grönvold 1984). The result of the glass analyses show a very homogeneous chemical composition and an average of these is included in Table 1 for comparison. The chemical com- position of the glass phase is identical with that of Grímsvötn which strongly supports the sugges- tion of a single magmatic system (Jakobsson 1979). The volume of the lava from the Laki craters, about 12 km3, corresponds to a 200 year heat supply of the Grímsvötn geothermal area. No significant effects were noted in the frequency of eruptions and jökulhlaups from Grímsvötn after the Lakagígar eruption (Thórarinsson 1974). This must either mean a very quick recovery of a high level magma system or that the behaviour of the volcanic system, which may include Grímsvötn and the fissures swarm to the south, is more complicated. One complication would be that the Lakagígar eruption was an addition to the “norm- al“ magmatic activity of this volcanic system rather than an eruption simply brought about by a rifting event. The chemical composition of the magmatic intrusions that maintain the geothermal system is not inevitably the same as that of the relatively minor eruption products. It has even been sug- gested that a more primitive magma rises below Grímsvötn where it partly crystallizes to feed the geothermal system but then the liquid convects down again (Tryggvason 1982) moving the space problem to a deeper level. Another possibility could be a density trap (Stolper and Walker 1980). The more primitive magma would then be denser and trapped as intrusions while a more evolved magma escapes to the surface in erup- tions. The apparent homogeneity of the ash, however, seems to argue against both these possi- bilities as neither would result in the strict control of the chemical composition observed. The observations of this eruption, considered in the context of the general behaviour and character of the area, show a magmatic system capable of producing continuously large volumes of evolved magmatic liquids of uniform chemical composition. The evolution processes of this magma seem to take place at deeper levels than the heat extraction that maintains the geothermal system, and the buffering capacity that maintains this evolved composition is not exceeded by large eruptions like that of the Laki craters 1783-84. 8 JÖKULL 34. ÁR
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