Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Page 45

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Page 45
43 futation of Thoroddsen’s picture. (The papers of Thoroddsen and Pjeturss are too well known to need detailed quoting here). Pjeturss was an ambitious man. He was unaware of much evidence on the meaning of his tillites in the basalt plateau, as we shall see. He ignored the morphology of the Basalt Plateau also completely. He ceased working on geology after a decade, satisfied with his "great victory” and his fame, while Thoroddsen devoted all his life to natural history, doing an immense pioneering historical work after his period of field observations. Every new generation of fully educated geologists, Icelanders and foreigners alike, convinced themselves of the reality of the tillites, and their correct interpretation by Pjeturss. Only a master of mathematics, physics, and astronomy at the college in Akureyri (the present author), who had found pleasure in reading Kayser’s very thick volume of Lehrbuch der Geo- logie (edition 1923, I believe) and Emile Haugs admirable volumes of Traité de Geologie, — was not satisfied, first and foremost on the basis of own studies of morphology of the Eyjafjörður valley system, but without study of Pjeturss’ til- lites (31, my first geological paper), cf. also (32). Only much later, I got thoroughly acquainted with these tillites, — after a too long period of trial and error — those of the Esja—Hval- fjörður area being especially important, just those which so many geologists had visited. I might first remark that for some strange reason, the ap- parently fresh basalts of the Esja and Hvalf jörður region which abound with intercalated glacial signs, have been found unfit for K/Ar-dating. I wonder whether the trouble is that they have been rather deeply buried at some time previously. One thing is certain: These intercalated glacial signs simply do not fit with Pleistocene glaciations. The glacial vestiges, which are true enough, alternate far too often and far too sud- denly with lava flows to fit the time scale of Pleistocene major glaciations, and even that of early and late-glacial climate fluctuations (cf. chapter 1). One cannot take off a Pleistocene icecap like a hat, just to make place for a lava flow and then put the cap on again. The main clue to these glacial intercalations is in a number of cases clear enough. They are the vestiges of a nearby temp-
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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