Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 46

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 46
44 orary high volcano, on which an icecap was formed, and from which glacial water or glacial tongues reached the surrounding lower ground, an extremely common phenomenon in higher- latitude volcanic areas, which nobody takes to be a proof of Pleistocene age. We have pointed out, in this chapter, the origin of even high heaps of tuffbreccias in river courses and/or lakes. In the first chapter we have pointed out the importance of the Hólsfjöll tuffbreccia mountain chain for the glaciation of Eastern Iceland in Older Dryas time. In the upper basalts at Hvalfjörður there are many obvious cases of the formation of tuffbreccia in a lake which was due to a glaciation (lake deposits over glacial vestiges). This correlation is very sug- gestive, although the mountain itself is only found as a plate, sometimes a very thick one. This indicated mountain might leave intercalated glacial vestiges at a little higher level, and create a lake in which a new glacier-bearing tuffbreccia heap might form, and so on. By glacial erosion in the beginning, and later by weathering in lower Tertiary climate, each such moun- tain would rather soon be reduced to such a plate and then be covered by lava flows. The glacial vestiges are not found in the lower parts of the basalt pile, where the common lignite beds indicate a climate about 10 °C warmer than the present one at sea-level in Iceland today, and most probably an Eocene age. This climate corresponds about to the climate of southern Middle Europe today. And even the Alps are not high enough to produce now such glaciers, the signs of which can be ex- pected to be found after the peneplanation of the Alps. Vol- canoes of the height of the Alps or higher were unlikely to form in Eocene Iceland for reasons, which we shall explain. The basaltic lavas of the postglacial time in Iceland have had such a shallow origin, order of 25-30 km, as evidenced i.a. by earthquakes under Heimaey during the 1973 erup- tion, that the litho-hydrostatic pressure only allows them to rise to the neighbourhood of 1500 m (the physical exposition of this connection is given in my Textbook in Icelandic (16) if it should not be obvious to the reader). It seems reason-
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