Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 58

Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 58
Bergrún Arna Óladóttir et al. ditional tephra layers have been assigned an approx- imate radiocarbon age (Table 1a, 1b; Larsen et al., 2001). A total of four silicic Hekla layers have been identified in the prehistoric part of the studied sec- tion: HM, HN, HS and H4. They are all characterised by light-coloured lower parts and bluish-black upper parts (Figure 2). The last two tephra layers have been dated, having ages of ∼3860 and ∼4260 years, re- spectively (14C-age of 3515±55 and 3826±12 years BP, Table 1a; Larsen et al., 2001; Dugmore et al., 1995b). The HM and HN tephra layers have not been dated but their stratigraphic position indicates an age of∼3000 years. The soil thickness between them and the SAR derived in this study indicates that these two layers were formed by eruptions separated by ∼50 years. Figure 2. An example of a marker tephra layer: H4 (3826±12 years BP; Dugmore et al., 1995b) from the Hekla volcano, S-Iceland. – Dæmi um leiðar- lag, Heklugjóskulagið H4 (3826±12 geislakolsára, Andrew Dugmore og fl. 1995b) í jarðvegssniði í Atley. Two of the felsic marker layers, labelled A6 and A13 by Larsen et al., (2001), are distinguished by white pumice grains in a matrix of olive-grey ash. The latter has an age of∼8380 years (14C age of 7505±42 years BP, Larsen et al., 2001), whereas the former has an estimated eruption age of ∼7100 years (calculated from SAR). Other layers that are readily recognised include the dacitic SILK layers from the Katla volcano. These layers are characterised by their olive-green colour and needle-like pumice grains that resemble chips of wood, making these layers unique among the Holocene felsic tephra layers in Iceland. Ten SILK layers have been identified in the study area and three of those (SILK-UN, -MN, -LN) have been dated, hav- ing ages of ∼2855, ∼3235 and ∼3445 years, respec- tively, (14C age of 2660±50, 2975±12 and 3139±40 BP, Table 1a; Larsen et al., 2001). Basaltic tephra layers from the Katla volcano are readily distinguished from other basaltic tephra layers by their brownish-black to coal-black colour and com- ponents. They consist of poorly- to highly-vesicular ash- to lapilli-size glass grains (Table 2a) charac- terised by curvi-planar fracture surfaces. Clasts with fluidal surfaces (i.e. achneliths as defined by Walker and Croasdale, 1972) are present in most tephra lay- ers, but in minor amounts. The glass grains contain 1-5 modal% phenocrysts and groundmass crystals of plagioclase, olivine, clinopyroxene and rare mag- netite. Crystalline mafic and felsic wall-rock lithics, as well as hyaloclastite, and crystal fragments of pla- gioclase and olivine, are present in very trace amounts (< 1%). Construction of the composite soil section The composite tephra profile measured and sampled in this study contains the prehistoric part of the tephra succession as preserved in soil profiles east of the Katla volcano (Figures 1 and 3). The historical part of the succession, with at least 18 tephra layers from various sources, was previously sampled and analysed by Larsen (1981, 2000). Twenty-one historical tephra layers produced by the Katla volcanic system are known from soil sections around the volcano (∼870 AD to 1918 AD). Ten historical Katla layers and the Eldgjá tephra layer have been identified east of the Katla volcano (Larsen, 1981, 2000). For this study, nine historical Katla layers were analysed from three separate soil sections: at Hrífunes, about 8 km south- east of Atley; at Tjaldgilsháls, about 20 km northwest of Atley; and at Ytri-Dalbær, about 30 km east-north- east of Atley (Figure 1). The prehistoric tephra section is a composite one, stitched together from three separate sections mea- sured at closely-spaced locations. The three locations are Atley (AT and HA) and Rjúpnafell (RF) (Fig- ures 3a-3d). This composite section has an accumu- 58 JÖKULL No. 55
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