Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1992, Side 66

Jökull - 01.12.1992, Side 66
Þorvaldur Thoroddsen. 1889. Jarðfræði. Sjálfsfrœðarinn, fyrri flokkur, 2. bók. Sigfús Eymundsson, Reykjavík, 73 bls. Þorvaldur Thoroddsen. 1896. Nogle iagttagelser over surt- arbrandens geologiske forhold i det nordvestlige Island. Geol. Fören. Förhandl. 18: 114-154. Sjá einnig Land- fræðisögu Þ.Th. ÞorvaldurThoroddsen. 1908. Lýsing Islands, II. bindi. Hið íslenzka bókmenntafélag, Kaupmannahöfn. Þorvaldur Thoroddsen. 1922. „Naturforhold", bls. 540-551 í kafla um Island í Salmonsens Konversations-Leksikon, 2. útg., 12. bindi. Köbenhavn. Östrup, E. 1896, 1900. Diatomeeme i nogle islandske surtarbrand-lag. Medd. Dansk Geol. Foren. (3): 85-94 og (6): 23-30. SUMMARY HISTORY OF OPINIONS ON THE AGE OF ICELAND This paper traces the history of ideas regarding the geological "age of Iceland", as determined primarily from plant fossils exposed in the older lava sequ- ences of the island. The first statement on this age to become generally known among geologists, was that of the great Swiss paleontologist Oswald Heer (1809-1883). It is contained in vol. III of his "Flora Tertiaria Helvetiae" as well as in a short paper pu- blished in the same year (Heer 1859a,b). Heer’s opinion of a Lower Miocene age for fossil outcrops in the Northwest peninsula of Iceland was reitera- ted in the first volume of his "Flora Fossilis Arctica" (Heer 1868a). It should be noted that Heer’s Central European Lower Miocene corresponded to the Upper Oligocene in North Germany, the Oligocene having been suggested as a separate epoch in 1854. Heer also studied a number of other fossil floras from the Arctic and from Britain, finding almost all of them to be either Miocene or Mesozoic. Heer’s procedures in classification of these fossils were criticized, as well as the estimates of ages and of annual temperatures which he derived from the plant assemblages. In particular, a dispute developed in 1878- 79 between Heer and the British geologist J- Starkie Gardner (1844-1930) who was studying fossil localities in South England. He claimed, originally on the basis of somewhat slender arguments, that the British and Arctic floras were much more likely to be Eocene than Miocene. Gardner’s preferred explanati- on for major changes in climate was also much dif- ferent from that of Heer. After visiting Iceland in 1881, Gardner (1885a,b) became convinced that the Iceland flora was significantly younger than the oth- ers. Gardner’s conclusions on the age of South Eng- land floras were generally accepted very soon, but reactions to his other ideas were mixed. He seems to have dropped out of paleobotanical research by 1895, to become an expert on metalwork. In the following decades however, new fossil discoveries supported the view of an Eocene age for the Northern British and Arctic areas. Petrologic findings, for instance by Hol- mes (1918), indicated the unity of a "Thulean basalt province" between Britain and East Greenland, and in North America the concept of a widespread Eocene temperate "Arcto-Tertiary flora" (see Wolfe 1977) was popular until about 1960. In this time, Gardner’s important disclaimer regarding Iceland was forgotten. New paleontological and palynological work on Icelandic material by Askelsson (1946) and Pflug (1956, 1959) appeared to confirm an Eocene or even older age. This view hence prevailed through the critical early years of continental drift revival (e.g-, Wilson 1963), and was not refuted until mid-Miocene K-Ar dates on the older lava series in Iceland app- eared in 1967-68. Along with certain other persistent erroneous conceptions of the geology of Iceland, the view of an Eocene age may have delayed the general acceptance of sea fioor spreading by local scientists. 64 JÖKULL, No. 42, 1992
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