Jökull


Jökull - 01.06.2000, Side 37

Jökull - 01.06.2000, Side 37
Helgi Björnsson et al. 0 4 0 0 8 0 0 1 2 00 E le va tio n ( m a .s .l. ) 0 5 0 00 1 0 00 0 1 5 00 0 2 0 0 00 2 5 00 0 3 0 00 0 3 5 00 0 4 0 00 0 H o rizon ta l d is ta nce (m ) D E 0 4 00 8 00 1 20 0 E le va tio n (m a .s .l. ) A B 0 40 0 80 0 12 00 E le va a tio n (m a .s .l. ) C B A B C D E Figure 6. Sections across the Mýrdalsjökull caldera. AB: Goðabunga to Kötlukollar, CB: Fimmvörðuháls to Kötlukollar, DE: Háabunga to Sléttjökull. – Snið yfir öskju Mýrdalsjökuls. Several glacially eroded passes cut the caldera rim but the elevation of their deepest points has not been exactly determined. The lowest pass seems to lie at about 740 m between Háabunga and Kötlukoll- ar, facing southeast to the glacier outlet Kötlujökull. Sólheimajökull drains southwest through a 1050 m breach between Háabunga and Goðabunga. A pass in the northwest at about 1100 m heads toward Entu- jökull, and a northeastern pass toward Sandfellsjök- ull. A narrow gorge trending northeast is located just west of Austmannsbunga. This gorge may be a tect- onic feature subsequently eroded by water and ice. All these breaches in the caldera rim are potential path- ways for jökulhlaups from subglacial lakes at geot- hermal areas and during volcanic eruptions. Outside the caldera, several linear structures are prominent on the bedrock map. The topographic ridges that strike outward from the central volcano, presumably consist of hyaloclastites, and crater rows built up on volcanic fissures. On the western side of the caldera margin an E-W trending ridge, Fimm- vörðuháls, connects Goðabunga to the neighbouring Eyjafjallajökull volcano. The Kötlukollar ridge on the eastern side of the caldera has the same trend. Entu- jökull flows between two parallel NW-striking ridges named Enta and Entukollur. In contrast, no ridges strike toward south in the direction of propagation of the rift zone. A ridge strikes N45 / E from Aust- mannsbunga toward Öldufellsjökull, separating Sand- fellsjökull and Sléttjökull, and the deep and narrow V-shaped gorge north of Austmannsbunga. This gor- ge is 200-250 m deep and 1.5 km wide, and bounded by steep slopes. This roughly linear structure is a continuation of the Eldgjá fissure, which produced a lavaflow of 14 km  in 934 A.D. and is of tect- onic origin. However, it may subsequently have been eroded by jökulhlaups. Beneath Sléttjökull and Botn- jökull several isolated peaks bear witness to recent volcanic activity that has created new mountains at a rate, which keeps up with glacier erosion. Beneath the deeply-eroding Sólheimajökull the bottom dips 50 m below sea level, which is 100 m lower than the terrain in front of the glacier outlet, and is indeed the lowest observed elevation under Mýr- dalsjökull (Mackintosh et al., 2000). The region under Kötlujökull, however, has not been sounded. Ice thickness The ice thickness of Mýrdalsjökull is highly variable (Figure 8). The maximum ice thickness of about 740 m, is found in the northern part of the caldera where an area of 12 km is covered with more than 600 m thick ice. Outside the caldera the greatest ice thickness of 450 m was measured on the Eldgjá fissure. The thickness of the ice capping caldera rims is 150 to 200 m at Háabunga and Goðabunga. The main part of Sléttjökull has an ice thickness of 200-300 m, as has Sólheimajökull. The ice thickness of Kötlujökull is unknown. The distribution of the glacier surface area and ice volume for given elevation shows that about 20% of the bedrock of Mýrdalsjökull and 55% of its ice surface lies above 1000 m (Figure 9). The total volume of ice on Mýrdalsjökull is about 140 km  and the average thickness only 230 m. Inside the caldera an area of 17 km is below 740 m elevation containing 0.7 km  . The area and volume of ice inside the rims of the caldera, is 100 km and 45 km  , respectively. 36 JÖKULL No. 49
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