The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1914, Side 59

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1914, Side 59
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY 243 quite destitute of covering; on the other hand, on lava-streams near Mývatn (above 300 metres above sea-level) lichens are very frequent. There, many species of phanerogams have also made their appear- ance, and both there and in Kelduhverfi the lava is often found to be covered by a thick carpet of moss. On Reykjanes scores of square km. of lava are entirelv hidden beneath a soft greyish carpet of Grimmias. Between Jökulsá á Fjöllum and Jökulsá á Brú, and between Kaldakvist and Skaftá, more recent tufls appear upon the surface of very considerable tracts of the plateau, not covered by ice-striated dolerite-lavas or by modern, basaltic lavas. Where this tufl' does not appear as bare peaks or steep mountain-chains, the surface is covered by lava-gravel disintegrated from the breccia, or else it is covered by blown sand, which is widely distributed, not only on the interior plateau but also in the lowlands. Blown sand is of varied quality and origin. It majr be coarse or finer; it is some- times so íine that it penetrates everywhere. During violent storms in sandy districts the fme dust is carried to the most remote quar- ters of the island and is deposited as a fine layer all over the sur- face: it even falls on vessels in mid-Atlantic. But naturally most dust falls in districts bordering on the tuff-belt or situated in it, as the dust chiefly originates from the tuft'. The atmosphere in distant regions is often yellowish-brown because of the fine dust suspended in the air, and this dust-cloud is known in Iceland as “mislur.” This tulf-dust has played a very important part in the formation of the Icelandic soil and subsoil, and it can be demonstrated almost everywhere. In the blown-sand districts proper, and in the neigh- bouring regions, where also larger particles of stone are put into motion, wind-blown sand has a great mechanical influence and is a mighty geological factor; its denudating eflect upon the tuff moun- tains has been very great. Harder rocks are also affected bjT the sand; dolerites acquire a dull polish with irregular depressions, striations and furrows, while basalt is likewise sand-polished though to a less extent. Tuft and breccia mountains are always more highly disintegrated on the windward side, and llie isolated fragments of basalt embedded in the breccia project further from the ground- mass on that side than to leeward. When the wind is stormy, great masses of blown sand are constantly driven through the narrow valleys, which occur between the numerous sharp tuff-ridges east of Túngná, so that no vegetation can thrive there; onIjT here and
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The Botany of Iceland

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