Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 82

Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 82
Kate T. Smith and Hreinn Haraldsson DISCUSSION Trees in the Markarfljót sandur area These mature buried birch trees at Drumbabót are un- common in the Markarfljót area and Iceland in gen- eral, both in terms of their size in relation to their age and also in the nature of their burial. Compari- son of the radiocarbon date for the sampled Drumba- bót tree which was probably around 60–80 years old when it was killed (1230±35 14C yr BP) with Har- aldsson’s (1981) date for the layer with tree remains at Teigsaurar (1485±65 14C yr BP) and bearing in mind that gradual vegetational succession means that the underlying surface may have been stable for some 100–200 years before the trees really took hold, sug- gests that trees were probably growing across the Markarfljót sandur for some centuries prior to burial of the woodland. The biggest tree trunks and the most widespread birch woods in the lower part of the sandur field, Landeyjar, are also of similar age, dating from the mid first millennium AD (Haralds- son 1981). This indicates that burial events of this scale did not happen during this time on decadal or even centurial timescales, but were large-scale, low frequency events. As yet, no similarly large areas of mature trees have been discovered elsewhere in the valley or other tree remains buried by very thick tephra-rich deposits. Woody fragments and cavities in tephra layers and soils where woody plants once grew are common in low, valley-side prehistoric sediment exposures all along the Markarfljótsaurar margins and in Þórsmörk. Most of these fragments are less than one to five cen- timetres in diameter but on occasion may reach simi- lar sizes of around 20 cm across. This evidence for woodland extends in most profiles on lower slopes away from the sandur plain right up to the soils di- rectly beneath the Landnám tephra layer. Much work in Iceland indicates that the impact of settlement ac- tivities and later climatic deterioration significantly reduced tree cover (as discussed by Dugmore et al. 2005), and extensive evidence has been collected for this in the Markarfljót-Eyjafjöll area (e.g. Påhlsson 1981, Buckland et al. 1991, Simpson et al. 2001). The Drumbabót site is unusual in that mature wood- land grew here over a wide area but was extinguished perhaps some centuries prior to the settlement period and that there is no evidence here, or in other riparian zones in Landeyjar, of regrowth of similar woods after the burial event. Drumbabót flood The deposits at Drumbabót are most similar to jökul- hlaup deposits which make up the sandur surfaces along the south coast of Iceland (e.g. Skógasandur, Sólheimasandur, and Mýrdalssandur; e.g. Jónsson 1982, Maizels 1989, 1991, 1993, Tómasson 1996). Bedding of these sands suggests transport by a water- dominated flow. The lack of discrete bands of lithics or extensive low-flow facies with fine ripples or lam- inations, combined with the extremely good preser- vation of the trees suggests rapid emplacement of the sands within one flow event as opposed to normal out- wash conditions. Cross bedding and ripple lamina- tions in the deposit at Aurasel suggest low flow water transport perhaps into standing water forming a delta. These two different situations may indicate variation in the type of flow across the area or perhaps represent different time slices during the duration of the event. Perhaps Drumbabót lies closer to the main Þverá flood channel than the deposits north of Aurasel, explaining the difference in thickness of the deposits as well as the different flow regimes represented. If these deposits at Drumbabót, Aurasel and along the Markarfljót upvalley are indeed the products of a single event they are best explained by a flood orig- inating from close to or perhaps even beneath Mýr- dalsjökull passing down the Markarfljót. Haraldsson (1993) interpreted the Drumbabót deposits as the re- sult of a devastating flow caused by a subglacial erup- tion, a thesis supported by the more recent work pre- sented here. Tephrochronological dating of upstream events places the flood before the deposition of the Landnám tephra (871±2 AD, Grönvold et al. 1995) but after the deposition of Layer H (1540±50 14C yr BP, Smith 2004). No other evidence has been found for this event along the northwest or southern channel margins at Langanes or on the higher slopes north of Þórsmörk giving upper limits to the flow. However, it most probably did overtop the gorge as it entered the wider middle valley flowing across the relatively flat lava surfaces to Einhyrningsflatir, along previously 82 JÖKULL No. 55
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