Rit (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.06.1923, Side 110

Rit (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.06.1923, Side 110
106 rtes), Faxaflói, Reykjanes and on the south coast (in Árnes- sýsla and Westmann Islands), the land is sinking or the sea rising; and people say they can see an appreciable difference during the last 40 — 50 years. No exact observations or measurements of the height of the sea-level liave been made in these places, covering a period of any extent, so that it is impossible to decide this matter with certainty. The author, however, considers it probable that this popu- lar opinion has some foundation in fact, and he mentions several points that seem to bear it out. On the north coast of Breiðifjörður, by Vestfirðir and in Húnaflói, landfalls owing to the action of the sea are very rare. It is far more common for the 'sea to fill up bays and straits with gravel and sand. Where the coast is low in these parts and the sea has formed series of gravel ridges along the beach, the ridges usually grow lower as they get nearer the sea, and almost without exception the last gravel ridge, which the sea is now in the process of form- ing, is ihe lowest. This seems to indicate that the sea does not now throw gravel and sand as far up as it once did. On the south coast of Breiðafjörður (Snæfellsnes) and southward as far as the Westmann Islands landfalls owing to the action of the sea are much in evidence. In many places the sea has broken off strips of land and worn away grass-Iand, even within living memory. It has been necessary in some parts to remove farms and outhouses back from the sea and build walls to protect the land jrom the ravages of the sea (Árnessýsla) Wherever gravel ridges have been formed on a low-Iying coast, the ridge nearest the sea, which is now in process of formation, is gener- ally considerably higher (1—2 m.) than the ridges or the land behind it. In many cases these gravel ridges are gradually being pushed back up the shore by the sea. This certainly indicates that the land is sinking and has been sinking for a long time, in the south-west and south of Iceland, and that the sea is advancing on the land, throw- ing stones and gravel higher up now than previously. Sev-
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Rit (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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