Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 39

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 39
37 very much greater than that of pure lake water. Thus we con- clude that the Helluvað channel began to take shape and finally lowered the level of Mývatn soon after the beginning of the first Pleistocene glaciation of such a magnitude that at least the Vatnajökull came into being as a glacier. But the indicated advance- and retreat stages during the whole Pleistocene time created the Helluvað channel and kept it open. During fullfledged glaciations the Helluvað channel could have been filled with moraines, and also the slopes towards it might be covered with such masses to form a temporary dam and a high Mývatn level. This probably took place during the last glaciation as the formation of the ringmountain Hverfjall suggests (23). The Kálfborgará — Seljadalur N-S river valley belongs to the generation of the shallow N-S striking valleys, and the river cuts the reverse lavas from Kálfborg (22). This river was later captured by the Skjálfandafljót, as the Bárðardalur grew deeper and deeper during the Pleistocene. The two main magnetic groups, our main normal one (N3„) and the over- lying reverse Kálfborg lavas (R2„), have thus both been sub- jected to this pre-glacial N-S valley formation. As we can trace the lower group right to the fault which separates the uplifted and northwest-wards tilted Tjörnes block from the mainland, and as we find two groups in Tjörnes which very reasonably correspond to our mainland groups, we seem to be able to bridge the fault. The main basalt group covering the Breiðavík deposits, is of the reverse magnetization, and extends over all the western half of the peninsula with constant dip rising to a height of 760 m in Búrfell (24). We accept this group to correspond to the Kálfborg lavas, which have a rather wide extension north of Kálfborg where it has survived. This is further supported by the fact that there is no visible origin of the reverse group in Tjörnes itself, and the group must have come from the mainland, as the lavas overflowed marine sediments in Breiðavík. The tilting of Tjörnes preserved the reverse group there, while it would not survive easily the formation of Aðaldalur by the Laxá during those intervals, when it was
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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