Jökull


Jökull - 01.06.2000, Side 51

Jökull - 01.06.2000, Side 51
Geirfinnur Jónsson and Leó Kristjánsson NEW SURVEY – JOINT PROCESSING In 1990 the authors began an aerial survey of the magnetic field along the south coast of Iceland. As a part of that survey, two lines and a loop were flown across the Katla caldera (Jóhannesson et al., 1990) beneath Mýrdalsjökull. Positions were determined by a Loran-C navigation system with the estimated position error not exceeding 3-400 m. Total-field mea- surements were made at 5 or 6 s (around 300 m) in- tervals. The flight altitude was higher than previously, 2000-2100 m. Initial processing of data was similar to that of Sigurgeirsson (Kristjánsson and Jónsson, 1996). Cross-over checks between Sigurgeirsson’s data and the 1990 data showed a mismatch which may be minimized by manually shifting some of his lines east or west by 0.5-1.5 km. This is reasonable because over the glacier there are few if any landmarks, and constant speed of the aircraft was apparently assumed in the plotting of Sigurgeirsson’s measurements, alt- hough ascending and descending must have affected the speed considerably. Figure 2 shows the field on Sigurgeirsson’s and our own flight lines after correcti- on for the mismatch. Our corrections extend beyond the glacier area where they may not be appropriate. It is obvious from Figure 2 that the field variati- ons along flight lines are on a much shorter scale th- an the line spacing. Before gridding the field, stand- ard procedure would be to filter and decimate the data along flight lines so that point spacing would be comparable with line spacing. That, however, would reduce the information in the data considerably. We have, therefore, decided to grid the original data which shows more detail, sometimes appearing as a pearl-chain structure along the flight path. This has to be kept in mind during visual inspection of the gridded representation of the magnetic field. We used the (Golden Software) Kriging method for gridding the data to a 50 by 50 km grid with 1 km node spac- ing. The field intensity is displayed in color in Figure 3, and as illuminated relief in Figure 4. GEOLOGICAL SETTING AND OTHER GEOPHYSICAL DATA The region under study lies in the southernmost part of the eastern volcanic zone of Iceland. The zone is associated with a broad magnetic high of 20 km width trending 45-50  east of north. This high, which is pre- sumably due to basalt volcanics emplaced during the Brunhes geomagnetic chron (  0.78 Ma), disappears at the south coast. The region is characterized by frag- mental rocks of the palagonite formation of subglacial or subaqueous origin. Radiometric age determinati- ons (K. Wiese, personal communication 1994) indica- te that the adjacent Eyjafjallajökull volcanic center is about 1 Ma old. The presence of an approximately 14 km long and 11 km wide caldera, trending NW under central south Mýrdalsjökull was indicated in the geological map of South Iceland (Jóhannesson et al., 1990). Björnsson et al. (1994, 2000) have mapped the caldera in detail by radio-echo sounding. Its depth is 600 to 750 m, deepest in the north, while shallower and more rug- ged in the south. Björnsson et al. (1994) suggest that the variable morphology reflects different levels of volcanic activity. The highest topography occurs at the caldera rim where peaks protrude the glacier surface as nunataks. Seismic undershooting on a NNW-SSE line through Mýrdalsjökull (Guðmundsson et al., 1994) revealed anomalously low velocity and an S-wave shadow beneath the caldera. They suggested this was caused by a shallow magma chamber in the crust, about 5 km across and reaching down to about 1.5 km below sea level. Earthquake activity in the Mýrdals- jökull area (Einarsson and Brandsdóttir, 2000) orig- inates in two main areas, one within the topographic caldera, the other farther west, at the periphery of the glacier. It is suggested that this activity is related to two magma chambers within the volcano, the western one being younger and less developed. A positive Bouguer gravity anomaly of up to 40 mgal is found over Mýrdalsjökull. Guðmundsson (1994a,b) suggests that the main anomaly is due to a gabbroic intrusive complex which may not reach above 2.5 km depth. A large gabbroic body should be expected to generate a positive magnetic signature 50 JÖKULL No. 49
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