Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1989, Side 109

Jökull - 01.12.1989, Side 109
chapter reviews briefly earlier efforts in glacier map- ping and glacial hydrology in Iceland. Chapter 2 outlines theoretical concepts (to be applied later in the book) on subglacial drainage including specifically Icelandic subjects such as the interac- tion of the glacier with geothermal activity and subglacial eruptions. Chapter 3 describes surface topography and radio-echo sounding results from Vatnajökull and Hofsjökull. The sounding lines total 4500 km in length and cover about 3400 km2 in detail. To a hard-rock person like myself, the single most remarkable feature of these results may be the mapping of large caldera structures in the basement. Chapter 4 deals with the ice catchment basins on the two glaciers, and Chapter 5 discusses subglacial lakes in westem Vatnajökull, including the geother- mal Grímsvötn lake and its discharge through the Skeiðará river. Chapter 6 treats Grímsvötn in more detail, using conservation equations for water mass, energy and solute content to infer the magnitudes of the main heat sources (totalling 4-5 GW on average) for this unique lake. Other observational data is also used to constrain the possible mechanisms for hla- ups from Grímsvötn. Chapter 7 delineates water drainage basins in the glacier areas so far investi- gated; the divides between these do not always coin- cide with the corresponding ice divides. This topic is especially of interest for the main sponsor of the echo sounding project, the National Power Com- pany. The final chapter presents the main conclu- stons of the book, including the important result that at least in Iceland — the water pressure at the glacier bed appears to be approximately equal to the ice overburden pressure rather than to atmospheric pressure ; this has long been a disputed subject among glaciologists. It is difficult to find anything to criticize in this work. The book is very well written and legible, and the accompanying maps are beautifully produced. There are some errors of typographical nature in the text and the list of references; many of these are of the inconsequential but stubbom kind for which an author tends to blame the printers or, more recently, his word-processor. In b/w photographs of distant glacier scenes (such as some of those in Chapter 1), I have difficulties in distinguishing between glacier, snow, rock or even clouds, but this may not be a problem to more seasoned readers. In the interesting computer-drawn perspective plots of the subglacial landscapes in Chapter 3, inclusion of a coordinate grid or index map would have been helpful. Presentation of the radio-echo sounding method, equipment and signal processing, only takes up a few pages in the book. One would have liked to see a more extensive discussion of the feasibilities and limitations (e.g., resolution, sources of errors and artifacts) of the method based on the author’s experience, as he has indeed done recently in Ice- landic in the festschrift "í hlutarins eðli" (1987). In this paper he mentions that the sounding records sometimes show evidence of layering within the ice, such as may be caused e.g. by thick ash deposits. This work, for which Helgi Bjömsson was awarded the dr. philos. degree by the University of Oslo in Dec. 1988, is a major landmark in glaciolog- ical research in Iceland. It has both fundamental value in the scientific understanding of glaciers and subglacial volcanism, and economical value for projects hamessing the glacial rivers for electricity generation or other purposes. One must hope that it reaches the large intemational circulation that it deserves; unfortunately much original research in Icelandic geoscience, including not only the glacio- logical contributions of Þórður Þorkelsson and Sveinn Pálsson in past centuries but also quite recent work, has remained relatively unknown due to difficulties in getting its results distributed to the scientific community. The many glacier enthusiasts in Iceland will no doubt look forward to a continua- tion of the radio echo sounding activities, as well as to other surveys of the glaciers of Iceland that build on these successes. Leó Kristjánsson The book "Hydrology of Ice Caps in Volcanic Regions" (Societas Scientiarum Islandica, Rit (Monograph) 45, Reykjavík 1988, viii +139 pp. and 21 maps, $55) may be ordered from the University Bookstore, University oflceland, 101 Reykjavík. JÖKULL, No. 39, 1989 107
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