Jökull


Jökull - 01.06.2000, Side 21

Jökull - 01.06.2000, Side 21
Guðrún Larsen Entujökull gaps (e.g. Larsen, 1978; Dugmore, 1987; Sigurðsson, 1988), as well as the Kötlujökull gap, while post-Eldgjá jökulhlaups have been confined to the Kötlujökull gap. Lasting effects: The post-Eldgjá changes When volcanic activity was resumed after the  200 year repose following the Eldgjá eruption, new con- ditions had developed on the sandur plain in front of Kötlujökull. The Álftaver lava was now a high area that formed a barrier obstructing meltwater flow to the east. Hyaloclastite flow(s) at Kriki had, possibly, raised the topography on the northern side of Kötlu- jökull by tens of metres and changed the topography below the glacier significantly. The combined effect was to direct jökulhlaups escaping through the Kötlu- jökull pass in a southerly direction, into the lower ly- ing areas to the west of the lava fields. Some recovery of the areas damaged by the Eld- gjá eruption took place during the long repose. The areas along the edges of the Eldgjá lava fields are likely to have developed in the same way as Bruna- sandur in front of the 1783 Skaftáreldar lava, which became vegetated within decades and farmable within two centuries (Thoroddsen, 1911). In the following centuries, revegetated areas and farmlands within and along the borders of the present sandur plain were gradually destroyed (e.g. S.t.s. Ísl. IV, 1907-15). Tephra fall affected the neighbouring areas, some- times severely, but the effects were temporary. Per- manent damage on the scale inflicted by the Eldgjá tephra has not reoccurred. Compared to the jökul- hlaups, airfall tephra plays a minor role in the post- Eldgjá changes. Changes caused by the post-Eldgjá jökulhlaups can be assessed from many sources. The first doc- umented occurrence of a jökulhlaup after more than 200 years repose was Höfðárhlaup that flooded the western part of Mýrdalssandur shortly before 1179 AD, destroying several farms and two churches within the Höfðabrekka parish (Biskupa Sögur 1878). The comment in the Book of Settlement that a sandur plain, Höfðársandur, now lies where there was pre- viously a fjord, suggests that significant changes had taken place when the comment was written in the late 12th or early 13th century (Íslensk Fornrit I). Farms within the Álftaver lava were flooded and abandoned in the late 15th century (Gestsson, 1987; Árnadótt- ir, 1987), indicating that by then jökulhlaups could flood the lava field. This implies that the surface of the sandur plain west of the lava field had been raised to a point where jökulhlaups were no longer deflected by the lava edge and that the sandur was progress- ing onto the lava field. Continuation of this develope- ment is seen in all the documented jökulhlaups since 1625 (S.t.s.Ísl. IV, 1907-15). The shoreline at var- ious times since the Norse settlement can be recon- structed with reference to the Book of Settlement and younger sources (e.g. S.t.s. Ísl. IV, topographic maps from 1904 onvards). An extension of up to 4 km from the pre-Eldgjá shore is implied by such recon- structions. The permanent addition to Mýrdalssandur along the 30 km of shore between Vík and Álftaver lava is at least 60 km . Evidence of the changes is also preserved in the soil in areas within and adjacent to Mýrdalssand- ur. The soil that began to form on the Álftaver lava shortly after the eruption, is devoid of windblown sand size material until the early 15th century. This change becomes noticeable above the tephra layer from the 1416 Katla eruption and increases drastically above the 1625 Katla layer. The increasing influx of windblown material is best explained by sand blowing in from areas close to the Álftaver lava, i.e. a growing sandur plain. Frequent renaming of the rivers on Mýrdalssand- ur implies that both their courses and character have repeatedly changed through time. Some have disap- peared while others have appeared temporarily fol- lowing major jökulhlaups. The most recent example is the disappearance of the Sandvatn river, a glacial river in the middle of Mýrdalssandur, following the 1918 jökulhlaup. The picture emerging from the pieces of infor- mation is the following: When volcanic activity re- sumed after a long repose, jökulhlaups accompanying Katla eruptions repeatedly flooded the area between the Álftaver lava field and the hyaloclastite mountains of Höfðabrekkuheiði. Different parts were affected in different eruptions but the overall effect of repeated deposition of water-transported debris was to fill in 20 JÖKULL No. 49
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