Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 152

Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 152
Leó Kristjánsson on dikes and faults, zeolites, tectonic tilts, etc., and most other studies on such features in Iceland. Walker’s admirable research on central-volcano complexes was a key ingredient in the new under- standing of the geology of Iceland. Although the exis- tence of such features here had been implied by some earlier geologists (e.g. G.W. Tyrrell, see Kristjánsson, 1995), Walker was the first to demonstrate their exis- tence and describe their main characteristics. The Icelandic scientists Trausti Einarsson and Thorbjörn Sigurgeirsson had been studying magnetic remanence directions in Icelandic basalts since 1953, and Einarsson was applying them to extensive strati- graphic mapping in Southwestern and Eastern Ice- land. Sigurgeirsson had contacts with P.M.S. Black- ett of Imperial College who had become interested in planetary magnetism and the magnetic properties of rocks in connection with his Nobel prize-winning research on cosmic rays. Sigurgeirsson presumably learned about Walker’s research in Eastern Iceland as soon as it began, through these contacts or the Na- tional Research Council of which he was director un- til 1957. Einarsson (1960) wrote a very favorable ac- count of Walker’s mapping work in Reyðarfjörður. 1961–1965 GeorgeWalker received grants from the Science Fund of Iceland in 1961–1963; these grants were probably very small in proportion to total costs of a field project like Walker’s, but it was a rare distinction for a foreign scientist. One of Walker’s major contributions to improved understanding of the stratigraphy and tectonics of Ice- land was his realization that the country had been formed by processes of crustal spreading. Walker and G. Böðvarsson, who was then at the State Electric- ity Authority, collaborated on an important paper on this matter (Böðvarsson and Walker, 1964). It was submitted just before the Vine and Matthews (1963) hypothesis on generation of the ocean floor appeared in print, and I expect independently of it. Some Ice- landic geoscientists were sceptical of the spreading concept, for various reasons. It might be instructive to discuss these in detail but I shall only mention a few here: the traditional belief that Iceland was the remnant of a continent (supported by the presence of acidic rocks); its oldest exposed rocks being thought to be of Eocene or even older age (until 1968); and the absence of vertical structures like those prominent in the Vine-Matthews model. In early 1963, Sigurgeirsson discussed the pos- sibility of a major sampling project in Iceland dur- ing a visit to Blackett’s laboratory (see Kristjánsson, 1993). One of Blackett’s former students, R. L. Wil- son, wrote an application for the funding of such an expedition which eventually took place in 1964 and 1965. The 1964 sampling began in SW-Iceland in June, in profiles mapped by T. Einarsson. In the first days of August the party (Figure 2) set up camp near Neskaupstaður and began sampling in 15 lava profiles mapped byWalker. He painted a number on each lava, which greatly aided their correct identification. Addi- tionally, Walker provided a diagram of each profile, with geological information and sometimes instruc- tions regarding access. A complete set of his origi- nal 1964 drawings, dated between 25 July and 1 Sept. are in my possession, and one is reproduced here as Figure 3. They must have been made in his tent or his Land-Rover, and some were delivered only a day or two before the sampling of the respective profiles began. Invariably, they were very well done and cer- tainly served their purpose. In July of 1965 Walker mapped another six profiles along the Norðurdalur valley of Fljótsdalur, for sampling by an expedition of smaller size. 1966–1977 Although Walker’s main research emphasis shifted away from Iceland after 1965, he visited the country a number of times later. The instances which I recall include the 1974 conference on “The geodynamics of Iceland and the North Atlantic area” where he pre- sentedmajor new results and ideas about the country’s geology and also about its deeper crustal structure. Subsequently, he published a paper (Walker, 1975) on areas in Iceland where the lower crust had been ex- posed by deep erosion, relating his findings to stud- ies by others of ophiolites such as Troodos in Cyprus which had by then been accepted to represent slices of ocean crust and uppermost mantle rocks. The 1964–1965 paleomagnetic sampling expedi- tion in Iceland had been by far the largest single effort 152 JÖKULL No. 55, 2005
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