Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1989, Side 77

Jökull - 01.12.1989, Side 77
Tertiary Silicic Rocks in the Area of the Kækjuskörð Rhyolitic Volcano, Eastem Iceland LÚÐVÍK E. GÚSTAFSSON Commercial College oflceland Ofanleiti 1, IS-109, Reykjavík, Iceland BERNHARD LAPP and LUTZ THOMAS Institutfur Geologie Freie Universitat Berlin Altensteinstr. 34, D-1000 Berlin 33, F.R.G. MANUELLAPP Institutfur Geologie und Dynamik der Lithospháre Georg August Universitát Göttingen Goldschmidtstr. 3, D-3400 Göttingen, F.R.G. abstract In the summer of 1987 geological mapping and structural investigations were carried out in the Loðmundarfjörður area in Eastern Iceland. A small volcano, the Kœkjuskörð rhyolitic volcano, was niapped. It is composed mainly of silicic rocks and could have formed as an independent eruption unit, hut its origin as a parasitic volcano oflarger central volcanoes not far away cannot be excluded. In the area from Borgarfjörður Eystri in the north to Seyð- lsfjörður in the south there were probably four cen- tral volcanoes active in Tertiary times: the Dyrfjöll central volcano, the Breiðavík central volcano, the Uerfell central volcano and a fourth central volcano now nearly completely eroded and concealed below sea level, the Seyðisfjörður central volcano. Rhyolites and dacites of the Kœkjuskörð rhyolitic volcano are described and analysed, and geochemi - cal analyses of basaltic rocks of the adjacent lava pile are also presented along with the CIPW norms of the rocks. The silicic rocks are interpreted, in contrast to former views, as lavas flows. Five different silicic lava flows could be identified. In the area of the Kœkjuskörð volcano at least three different ignimbrite formations occur. Two of them are early products ofthe Kœkjuskörð volcano. The third, a partly welded ignimbrite sheet, was erupted from the Herfell central volcano. Relatively good exposures in the mountains to the north and west of Loðmundarfjörður enabled an isopach map ofthis ignimbrite sheet to be constructed. INTRODUCTION The northemmost part of eastem Iceland around the fjords of Borgarfjörður Eystri and Loðmundar- fjörður is one of the geologically least known parts of Iceland, even though it contains the second larg- est outcrop of silicic rocks in the country and thus JÖKULL, No. 39, 1989 75
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