Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2004, Side 6

Jökull - 01.01.2004, Side 6
Hafdís Hanna Ægisdóttir and Þóra Ellen Þórhallsdóttir Figure 1. Areas of proposed limited glaciation during the Weichselian period. 1) ice-free areas according to Einarsson (1963); 2) possible plant refugia areas (Steindórsson, 1963) and 3) areas of alpine landscape devel- opment, including a relatively limited glaciation (Sigbjarnarson, 1983). Figure reproduced with permission from Ingólfsson, 1991. – Svæði sem líklega höfðu takmarkaða jökulmyndun á síðasta jökulskeiði. 1) líkleg íslaus svæði (Einarsson, 1963); 2) hugsanleg afdrep fyrir plöntur (Steindórsson, 1963) and alpalandslag með fremur lítilli jöklun (Sigbjarnarson, 1983). Myndin er úr grein Ólafs Ingólfssonar, 1991. ing to habitat and areas. Although he did not reject the idea of glacial survival, he points out that some moun- tain plants e.g. Antennaria alpina and Carex nardina are restricted to areas of continental climate. Geological studies over the last twenty years have suggested that ice-free areas existed in Iceland dur- ing the last glacial period. The snowline in the fjords of northern Iceland is believed to have been signif- icantly higher at the northern side of the main ice sheet than on the south side, due to different climate conditions, suggesting that single mountains or peaks were ice-free during the last glacial period (Einars- son, 1991). The Vestfirðir peninsula in northwest Ice- land was probably covered by an independent icecap during the last glacial period. Evidence from Horn- strandir (the northernmost part of the Vestfirðir penin- sula) suggests that active glaciers did not cover the high plateaus, as no sign of glacial erosion or depo- sition were found there. However, it is possible that the plateaus were covered by thin, inactive and/or cold based glaciers or firns (Hjort et al., 1985). Greenland – Survival or not? Around the middle of the last century, Danish botanists, such as Böcher (1956, 1972) and Gelting (1941) supported the hypothesis of glacial survival in Greenland. Palaeoecologists, on the other hand, argued against this. In 1953, Iversen published the first pollen diagram from a Greenland lake. This in- 6 JÖKULL No. 54
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