Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1976, Page 122

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1976, Page 122
120 tion at a stratigraphically high level, setting here a lower are liniit of 0.7 million years. As these strata have been traced without a break right across the 8 km interval, it can be demonstrated that “spreading” has not occurred, or has been less than the often assumed 2 cm/y, by at least two orders of magnitude, during the last 0.7 million years. The age of the underlying dolerites can hardly be less than one million years which is three or four times the earlier estimates. Just before the Last Glaciation, the uplift phase of the Reykjanes peninsula was also active in this area, and a 17-18 km long SW-NE arch was fonned by uplift, with a maximum height (800 m) in the Hengill mountain. The volcanic and tectonic activity in the Median Zone is considered to be the result of yield to an extensive crustal stress field, the phases of which express themselves somewhat differently, as can be explained in classical mechanical teims. Land-based data lead to conclusions conceming the submarine Reykjanes ridge. These and several other general problems in geoscience will be treated in Part II of these studies. By the Median Active Zone in Iceland is meant that zone whose axis runs, first, along the E-W-striking Reykjanes peninsula, and then to the NE across the Thingvellir and Langjökull areas (1, p. 7564). A continuation of the zone into the Skagafjord valley is indicated by faint postglacial volcanism in the tributary Svartár- dalur (2, p. 22), and hy the considerable volcanic activity about one million years ago at the mouth of Skagafjord (3; 4; 5). The same zone is further indicated by a somewhat older volcanism in the easternmost part of Húnavatnssýsla (2, p. 27; 3), cf. Fig. I.1) Here we shall consider some instructive features of the activity in the southem part of this zone — summarizing the field work of the author during the last dozen summer seasons. We divide this southem part into two sections: A) The narrow zone along the Reykjanes peninsula; B) The broad zone in the Thingvellir-Lang- jökull section. We shall mainly be concemed with the latter. The distinction between the two sections is natural and quite clear: the boundary follows rather closely a straight line, drawn between the mouth of ölfusá river and the northern part of Reykja- 1) Many place names and topographic features are mentioned in the present paper. Readers who are not familiar with these are referred to the available topographic maps in scales from 1:250,000 to 1:25,000, and to the geological maps in scale 1:250,000.
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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