Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.2007, Side 5

Jökull - 01.12.2007, Side 5
Early Pleistocene molluscan migration to Iceland strated between air temperatures and sea surface tem- peratures around Iceland (Stefánsson, 1991). The North Atlantic Current carries warm, saline water past Iceland on its way to the Norwegian-Greenland Seas, where it sinks and forms the dense North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) which flows back south across the North Atlantic ocean ridges towards the Equa- tor. The front between the surface water masses of the Labrador and Greenland-Norwegian Seas on the one hand and the warm Atlantic water on the other shifted southward during the last glaciation and north- ward across Iceland during the Weichselian deglacia- tion (Ruddiman and McIntyre, 1973). Similar events might have repeatedly happened during earlier Pleis- tocene glaciations and deglaciations. The purpose of this paper is to report Early Pleis- tocene shallow water palaeoceanographic data from western and northern Iceland, based on studies of ma- rine molluscan assemblages in coeval sediments on the northern side of the Snæfellsnes Peninsula in West Iceland and in the eastern part of Breiðavík on the Tjörnes Peninsula in North Iceland. The Tjörnes data are from the Máná Formation of the Breiðavík Group (Eiríksson, 1981; Vilhjálmsson, 1985). MATERIAL AND METHODS Several geological sections have been measured by the authors on the northern side of the Snæfellsnes Peninsula, western Iceland, to gain insight into the form and infilling of a Pleistocene sedimentary basin encountered during extensivemapping in 1998 (Leifs- dóttir, 1999). Sections from the deepest parts of the basin in Búlandshöfði and Stöð are presented here (Figure 2), both consisting of sediments capped with basaltic lavas. Most of the sediments are marine and samples have been collected during several years from seven different layers for analyses of marine macro- fossils. They were both bulk samples and shells picked from the sediments in the field. Microfossils are not dealt with in this paper. We could not process the bulk samples by sieving because of the consolida- tion by silica and palagonitization. Therefore the sam- ples were crushed in a vice and the shells picked from the fragmented sediment. The sedimentological data from the Máná Formation of the Breiðavík Group, northern Iceland, are from Eiríksson (1981) and the palaeontological data from Vilhjálmsson (1985) and the authors. In Tables 1-2 the numbers of the species were worked out as follows: whole gastropod shells and fragments with the spire preserved were counted; valves and umbonal fragments of bivalves were counted and their number divided by two; parietal plates of barnacles were counted and their number di- vided by six. These investigations were concentrated on the Early Pleistocene migrational history of three arc- tic molluscan species, Tachyrhynchus erosus, Port- landia arctica, and Tridonta placenta, and two boreal- lusitanian species, Littorina littorea andNucella lapil- lus. Their presence or absence in contemporaneous sediments in western and northern Iceland is thought to provide insight into the migration history of ma- rine molluscs in Iceland during the Early Pleistocene as well as changes in the pattern of ocean currents. THE BÚLANDSHÖFÐI FORMATION, SNÆFELLSNES, WESTERN ICELAND On the northern side of the Snæfellsnes Peninsula in western Iceland, from Kirkjufell in the east to Skarðs- lækur in the west (Figure 2), it is possible to trace fossiliferous sediments which are up to 50 metres in thickness and rest unconformably on glacially striated Tertiary basalts of reversed polarity (Pjetursson, 1904; Hospers, 1953). Here the Búlandshöfði Formation in Búlandshöfði and Stöð is the best known. The stratotype for the Búlandshöfði Formation is composite and consists of three members. In the lower Búland Member, consisting of pebbly diamicton with dropstone boulders, flat-bedded conglomerates, and sandstones, arctic marine fossils occur mainly in the diamictite which is interpreted as a glaciomarine de- posit (Figure 3). The upper Höfði Member in the Bú- landshöfði sequence consists mainly of shallow wa- ter, flat-bedded marine sandstones and conglomerates with thermophilic faunal assemblages. The shallow water marine sediments are not present in Stöð (Fig- ure 3). They are replaced by the StöðMember, deltaic sandstones and conglomerate overlain by finegrained JÖKULL No. 57 3
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