Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 28

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 28
26 are able to conclude that they did in reality form during a severe spell of climate at the end of the first Pleistocene glacia- tion of Iceland. We shall now proceed to gradually older rock groups in the country. Older than the Lyngdalsheiði are the blocks, uplifted to form a plateau north of the Laugarvatn area, i.e. north of Gríms- nes and Lyngdalsheiði. The plateau is crowned by horizontal basalt lavas, forming a sheet that must originally have con- sisted of at least 10-20 lavas. This sheet rests on the plain surface of a 500-600 m thick tuffbreccia, which from top to bottom is formed of 20—30° dipping foreset beds, particularly easy to see in the east side of Efstadalsfjall (16). A 400 m deep mature valley, Mjóidalur, in which the river Skillandsá flows to the south, has been eroded into the plateau in the west side of Miðdalsfjall (which is crowned by such erosional lava- remnants as Gullkista (681 m above sea-level), and Miðdals- skersli (768 m). The Mjóidalur is shown in the air photograph Fig. 5, with the typical Table Mountain Skriða resting centrally across the prolongation of the valley course. The meaning of this, and the important general inference, will be discussed later in this chapter. Here, we just point out our discussion of the tuffbreccia valley-volcanoes in (15). The structure of the breccias in the plateau under considera- tion demands a water depth of up to 500 m or 600 m, for the progression of the foreset beds to be possible. In Efstadals- fjall and the separate Bjarnarfell near Geysir, it is obvious that the eruptions started by a water depth indicated very clearly by signs of a water level (worn gravel) at a present height of 285 m and 300 m respectively (16, Fig. 27 and 26). Without any long break the eruptions continued by a depth corresponding to the higher signs of the water surface as al- ready mentioned, i.e. the level where the extensive lava sheet rests on the flat surface at the top of the foreset beds. The two different levels seem to indicate subsidence during the formation of these rocks rather than a rise of water level per se. The in- ference of a final uplift of the plateau by at least 500—600 m
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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