Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1976, Page 108

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1976, Page 108
106 have the vertical displaœments that in some places reach many hundreds of meters and even exceed a kilometer. The axial parts of the rift zones are depressed as regards the uplift zones framing them, hy, possibly, several kilometers. Besides block structures, the transition zones also contain gentle folds. The Borgames anticline to the north of Reykjavik is typical. Its gentle crest (with the dip of layers 3-5°) is traced in the north-eastem direction along the Nordurár-valley. It is disturbed along its axial part by a graben and also by numerous longitudinal, transversal and diagonal faults and the blocks limited by them are dislocated in relation to each other in the vertical direction by the amplitude of a few tens of meters. Volcanic rocks of different age are irregularly distributed in the rift zones. Though these irregularities are still inadequately studied, it is now evident that in the eastem rift zone the total thickness of the Pleistocene and Holocene rocks is larger in the middle of the island and decreases to its northern and southern margins. An espe- cially considerable reduction of the thickness of these rocks is found in the south, where the strata of hyaloclastites, breccia and thin basalts flows, stratigraphically referred to “ancient grey basalts”, i.e. the Pliocene and Eopleistocene, is traced in the cliffs of the southem coast from the east for a considerable distance into the rift and serves as a basement for recent volcanic formations. Geological history of Iceland The most ancient rocks of Iceland are found, as was already men- tioned, to be as old as 16 million years and belong to the Miocene. Much more ancient plateau-basalts 60 million years old (Early Eocene), but quite similar in composition and conditions of forma- tion with those developed in Iceland, are known in Greenland and on the Faroe Is. (33, 53). In both places the plateau-basalts are tilted towards the sea. On the eastern coast of Greenland a steep flexure is observed in the basalts. It can, therefore, be stated that the Eocene plateau-basalts cover the bottom of the Denmark Strait and the surface of the submarine Faroes-Iceland threshold. This interpretation of the observed geological structure is presented in
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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