Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1984, Side 92

Jökull - 01.12.1984, Side 92
Fig. 13. Schematic illustration of the upper end of one dyke in the research area. The dyke is 6 m thick, made of tholeiite and contains many vesi- cles, commonly a few millimeters in diameter and empty. At its upper end the dyke gradates into breccia and scoria, with at least three pillows (from 0.2m to 0.6m in diameter). Ahead of the dyke’s upper end occur four normal faults, A,B,C and D. Fault A: strike 24°, dip 70°E, throw 3m. Fault B: strike 76°, dip 65°W, throw 2m. Fault C: strike 60°, dip 70°W, throw lm. Fault D: strike 70°, dip 68°W, throw 4m. All the faults are closed, and only fault D has fault breccia, up to 1—2m thick. The average inclina- tion of the section is several tens of degrees to the south. Mynd 13. Einfölduð mynd af gangi sem endar upp á við í fjórum siggengjum. Sniðið hallar nokkra tugi gráða til suðurs. up in the lava pile. However, because so few faults were followed upwards, and also because the lava flows used to measure the throws are variable in thickness, the possibility still remains that some of the faults in the research areas were active over long periods of time, say for 105 years. The displacement in most single earthquakes is only of the order of a few centimeters (Jeffreys 1976, p. 477; Bullen 1963, p. 283) so a large succession of movements may be needed to pro- duce the observed throws. Slickensides and fault breccia are common. Measurements on the slickensides show that the displacement was vertical, that is, no strike-slip component is apparent. The fault breccia is com- posed of fine-grained grey to brown matrix and angular fragments of the country rock of various sizes. The thickness of the breccia varies from zero to, at most, a couple of meters. Most of the faults are closed and they are inconspicuous on the air photographs. Seen from a distance, the fault walls appear to be nearly straight, but on closer examination it is seen that they are sinuous. Only one fault was observed to dissect dykes, so the relative age of the faults and dykes is unknown. Apart from the faults observed in the profiles and described above, a few faults are apparent on the air photographs in the highlands to the west of Vatnsfjördur (Fig. 10). These are also normal faults, and the conspicuous fault scarps indicate that these faults have been active in Postglacial time (otherwise the scarps would have been eroded by the Pleistocene glaciers). The strike of the faults is NNW. The throw is variable, the maximum measured throw being at least 12 m. The fault scarps are mostly subvertical, but where the maximum throw was measured the dip was 70°. Together the main faults form a narrow graben (Fig. 10). Joints Joints are numerous in the lava flows. The most conspicuous are the almost vertical colum- nar joints. These joints are commonly 0.1-1 cm wide and empty. They occur at the interval of 1 m or so. In some places, mainly near sea level in the southern part of the area, there are occasional joints filled with minerals, that is, veins. Some of the vertical joints are irregular in shape, but in a horizontal plane most of them are nearly straight. Apart from the vertical joints, there are hori- zontal joints in the lava flows. Presumably, these joints result either from shear stresses in the lava flows while mobile, or from remnant stresses caused by burial and subsequent erosion and uplift of the lava pile. Few non-columnar joints occur in the research areas. Only in one place, in a lava flow at the east coast of Kjálkafjördur, did I observe well-defined tectonic (i.e. non-cooling) joint system. All the joints in this system are subvertical and most of them strike perpendicular to the dykes in the area. All these joints are empty. A search was 90 JÖKULL 34. ÁR
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