Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 32

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 32
30 magnetic polarity, i.e. on truely classical fundamental prin- ciples of stratigraphy, whereas the guesswork of picking out geopolarity epochs and events from a most questionable Geo- polarity Time Scale, can only lead to confusion in the geology of the country. The group (R3n) extends from Heljarkinn in Hreppar (17) somewhat northwards, where it covers directly the extensive group (N4n). The higher parts of the latter form brecciaceous ridges, as Fitjaásar, Geldingafell, and Digraalda, which stretch towards the tuff and breccia mountains of the Kerlingarfjöll group and the socle of Hofsjökull, the connection with which we cannot consider here. But on the north side of Langjökull and the Kjölur pass, we find again an uppermost normal group which is flatlying and brecciaceous towards the top. The extensive doleritic lavas farther north were first recognized and studied by J. Líndal, but more extensively and also paleomagnetically divided by the present author (17). There are three untilted magnetic groups, and finally a reverse group with slight tilt from Blanda river west towards the axis of the Median Active Zone. This lowest group is very fresh as the others, and is separated by a great unconformity from the Lower Tertiary lavas underneath, which contain lignite, a sign of Lower Tertiary age, as we shall see below. For this reason, I included in (17) the fresh Blanda group and (N4n) into a general class of „young“ rocks. We should now obviously be very cautious in our strati- graphic placing and magnetic denotation of the youngest tilted groups. (N4n) in the south and apparently (R5n) in the north, as the youngest tilted groups suggest in any case that the geomagnetic polarity succession is in either area not register- ed completely. But the age difference between (N4n) in the south and the Blanda reverse group in the north is probably small. The tilting should be taken to herald the first formation (as far as we know) of active zones in Iceland. The horizontal younger groups then are due to zonál activity. The zonal rocks are, as a rule, untilted, with very small-scale exceptions, cf.
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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