Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.2006, Side 66

Jökull - 01.12.2006, Side 66
David W. McGarvie et al. 879 m and rises from a base level at 580 m. Sam- ple TJ97-22 was collected from the base of the lava cap, and is a porphyritic obsidian containing 7% phe- nocrysts. Phenocrysts are dominated by euhedral and unzoned feldspars (anorthoclase) up to 4 mm in size but mostly around 1–2 mm, often forming clusters up to 7 mm in size; other mineral phases are ferroaugite, fayalitic olivine (Fo1), and ilmenite that occur in mi- nor amounts and do not exceed 0.5 mm in size, all set in a flow-banded and microlite-rich glass (A. G. Tindle, unpublished data). This sample is a mildly- peralkaline rhyolite (agpaitic index of 1.2) and is a comendite according to the classification scheme of Macdonald (1974). The base-summit height differ- ence of 300 m suggests that the ice sheet was at least this thick at the time of eruption. This sample has an Ar-Ar age of 278±18 ka. Older peralkaline rhyolites Two samples were collected from the eastern rim of the suspected caldera (Figure 2). Sample TJ97-14 was collected from the eruptive unit that forms the high- est ground above the eastern caldera rim (the moun- tain Hábarmur, 1199 m). This unit is around c. 40 m thick, comprises a number of lava bodies up to 200 m in size, and drapes older and more-altered rhyo- lites of unknown provenance. The presence of perva- sive columnar jointing in the lava bodies with promi- nent obsidian margins suggests interaction with water (Tuffen et al., 2001; Stevenson et al., 2006), which at this elevation is most likely to have been derived from melting of snow or thin ice (Lescinsky and Fink, 2000). Sample TJ97-14 is an aphyric black obsidian, which is flow-banded and contains scattered micro- lites that are mostly aligned parallel to flow bands. This sample is a peralkaline rhyolite (agpaitic index of 1.3), is a pantellerite according to the classification scheme of Macdonald (1974), and has an Ar-Ar age of 384±20 ka. Sample TJ97-9 was collected c. 1.5 km to the north of the Hábarmur summit, from a separate (c. 30 m thick) eruptive unit that forms a short (c. 300 m) WNW-ESE oriented ridge which overlies older, al- tered rhyolite of unknown provenance (Figure 2). The base of the unit is composed largely of microcrys- talline grey-yellow rhyolite whilst its top is domi- nated by strongly flow-banded, green-black obsid- ian and obsidian-dominated breccias. Whilst this unit may be an eroded subaerial lava flow that has lost its pumiceous carapace, the abundance of obsidian together with the presence of columnar-jointed lava bodies suggests interaction with water (cf. Lescin- sky and Fink, 2000; Edwards et al., 2002: Steven- son et al., 2006), in an environment similar to that of sample TJ97-14, where erupting lava may have inter- acted with snow or thin ice. Sample TJ97-9 is green and black, aphyric obsidian which is strongly flow banded and contains sparse microlites which are gen- erally aligned parallel to flow bands. This sample is a mildly-peralkaline rhyolite (agpaitic index of 1.1), is a comendite according to the classification scheme of Macdonald (1974), and has an Ar-Ar age of 83±6 ka. DISCUSSION Ring fracture rhyolites In the absence of absolute ages, a tentative eruption age for the ring fracture rhyolites of c. 80 ka (Mc- Garvie, 1984; McGarvie et al., 1990) was based on two assumptions: firstly that good preservation of the glaciovolcanic edifices implied eruption during the most recent (Weichselian) glacial period; and sec- ondly that the mild erosion experienced by the edi- fices (such as smoothed surfaces on some summit lava caps) was caused by the later and thicker ice of the last glacial maximum (c. 21–25 ka). Samples from two widely-separated tuyas were dated (Table 1): Illihnúkur in the east (72±7 ka), and SW Rauðfossafjöll in the west (67±9 ka). There is substantial overlap between the two ages, but the ap- parent 5 ka age difference is less than either of the two uncertainties. Consequently, it is reasonable to suggest that these two tuyas were erupted simultane- ously. However as the Ar-Ar ages for these two sam- ples were determined on feldspar (anorthoclase) sep- arates, these two ages only represent eruption ages if these feldspars crystallized immediately prior to erup- tion. Petrographic evidence such as euhedral shapes and lack of zoning (McGarvie, 1985) suggests that the feldspars have not experienced variable thermal 64 JÖKULL No. 56
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