The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1914, Side 57

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1914, Side 57
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY 241 The surface of the interior plateau, with the exception of the glacier-covered areas, consists of deserts of stones, lava, gravel and blown sand. Where the underlying rock is basalt, the surface of the plateau is usually strewn with angular blocks of basalt, often in irregular heaps. Occasionally ridges are found, covered with gravel and hlocks of glacial origin, but blocks split by frost are decidedly the xnore frequent upon these ridges. Ön the plateaus above the fjord districts of East Iceland, extensive areas are covered with angular blocks of basalt, but usually this layer of loose blocks is relatively thin. Similar conditions are met with in the north- vvestern peninsula and on the mountains of North Iceland; but in the interior of the country glacial materials and the more recent formations preponderate. In that part, therefore, the greater part of 4he area consists of ice-striated ridges of dolerite, post-Glacial lavas, old bottom moraines and blown sand. Ice-striated streams ol' old dolerite-lava occupy vast areas in the interior. North of the great Jökulls the dolei'ite lavas may be traced conlinuously from Arnarvatn in the west to Snæfell in the east. Here and there the dolerite is covered with recent lava, and the closer the Jökulls are approached the thicker becomes the surface-layer of glacial gravel. As already mentioned, these monotonous, bluish-grey, stony deserts present an extremely desolate appearance. The only points upon which the eye can linger are scattered snow'-drifts and large erratic blocks Ij'ing scattered upon the ridges. The landscape has undoubtedly remained for centuries unaltered in appearance; it must have looked as it does now, immediately after the snow'-fields of the Ice Age had retired. There is no sign of life, and deep silence reigns over the land. The dolerite ridges, as has been already said, are covered W'ith blocks rent by frost lietween which ice-striated domes protrude here and there. AIl the upper faces of the stones are dully polished and seamed by wind-abrasion. For days the traveller may see nothing else but gravel and ridges of rocks in endless succession like waves upon the sea; while as regards plants, only at intervals of 10 to 20 metres may a few stunted specimens of Armeria mari- tima, Salix herbacea and Cerastium alpinum be met wilh; the first- mentioned plant occurs most frequentlj'. Here and there partially dried-up water courses and river-beds are found which are filled during the thaws of spring; and pools and small lakes are also occasionally met with hidden awray in the low-lying ground be- tween the ridges. In the immediate neighhourhood of the Jökulls,
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The Botany of Iceland

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