Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2021, Side 81

Jökull - 01.01.2021, Side 81
Álftaver’s experience of the 1918 Katla eruption Vilhjálmur Bjarnason coming helter-skelter with news of the eruption. Sigurður rushed away to the sheep sorters, and the people at the sorting pens managed to cross the Skálm river at the Skógarvað ford just 1–2 km away ahead of the floodwater front, shortly before the flood reached the river. Vilhjálmur, who had rid- den in distress for seven kilometres, crossed the Skálm and parted with Sigurður. He and the sorters who were located at the Fossarétt sheep sorting pen made the crossing just before the flood entered the river (Bjarnason, 1985). Other sorters who were not by the sorting pen had to go a long way to cross the river Skálm and rode towards Skálmabæjarhraun. When the sorters had crossed the river Skálm they saw the flood wall, in an estimated 10-minute travel time from their location (Jóhannsson, 1919). When news of the flood reached the herders in the Upphagar pastures they rode as fast as they could by Nátthagasker, and when they approached the rocks north of Ljósavatnaháls they became aware of the flood that streamed across the outwash plain west of Laufskálavarða (Figure 3), and so they headed straight for Skálmarbæjarhraun lava field and Skálmarbæjar- hraun farm (Figure 4). The men herding the flock in Upphagar, between the rivers Leirá and Skálm (Figure 3), first noticed that something serious was happening. When they were some distance south of Laufskálavarða, they had heard increasing thudding and crashing but could not see the flood, as they were in a sandy hollow with ridges on both sides which obscured the view to the west. They continued towards the Fossarétt pen. But when “we were far south of Laufskálavarða and north of the grassland we could see that some are leav- ing the sheep-sorting pen and crossing Skálm, and just then we saw men [from Upphagar] riding as fast as they could from the west and crossing the Ljósu- vatnaháls and heading to the east towards the pen (Figure 4). And we had only a short distance to the grassland, but as the sheep became tired from all the travelling, we walked with the sheep and towed the horses behind” (Oddsson, 1968, page 6). During this, one of the lambs became separated from the flock. One herder, Jón Gíslason from Norðurhjáleiga, turned around to get the lamb into the flock, and Brynjólfur Oddsson from Þykkvabæjarklaustur is quoted as say- ing that when Jón had turned round he said: “So it’s Katla!” (Oddsson, 1968 page 6–7). Brynjólfur esti- mated that the flood was not over 100 metres away from them (Oddsson, 1968). Jón Gíslason’s description of events is as follows: “What I saw will stay with me for a long time. Be- hind us was raging an enormous, terrifying flood which tore along the depression between the two lava ridges... We moved as fast as we could, heading south to Ljósavatnaháls. When we got there, we saw that the flood was spreading eastwards out of the river Skálm, to the south of us; so, it was not possible to continue that way. We changed direction then and carried on towards Skálmarbæjarhraun. We galloped the horses at the depression which lies between Ljósa- vatn and the lava field and tore straight across ditches and streams. It was touch and go whether we or the flood would win. Still, we reached the edge of the lava before the flood hit it, but it was so close that it broke over our trail 40–50 metres from the edge of the lava field.” (Gíslason 1919, page 35) Once they were up on the lava field, they contin- ued towards a rock islet in the western part of the lava field, where the other herders from the summer pas- tures and the sheep sorters who had been unable to cross the river Skálm had congregated. People kept together and watched the flood (the branch of the out- burst flood that emerged on the outwash plain west of Laufskálavarða, Figure 3) as it raced with tremen- dous power and speed, sweeping along icebergs and flowing over everything in its path (Gíslason, 1919). The leading edge of the flood pushed up soil and veg- etated land (like rolled-up pancakes), which then be- came mixed with the glacial water and was destroyed (Gísladóttir and Margrétardóttir, 2004, p. 7). The out- burst flood was dark brown and formidable, according to their description, with a strong stench of sulphur. The men did not think it was advisable to stay on the rock, with their many horses and no vegetation. The flood was heading around the islet west of Skálmar- bæjarhraun (Figure 2), so they made for the Skálmar- bæjarhraun farm which was the northernmost farm in Álftaver and the only farm north of Skálm (Gíslason, 1919). JÖKULL No. 71, 2021 79
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