Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 22

Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 22
16 TRAUSTI EINARSSON old moraines and is possibly identical with Pjeturss’ lower moraine at Barkarstaðir. Beautifully striated boulders are also easily found here. Yet, comparing the different boulders we find that their striae are always largely parallel and strike along the mountain slope, as if made by a late glacier creeping down the valley of the Markarfljót — as undoubtedly they are. By chance the boulders could not be put in such position in a moraine, but protruding out of the hard con- glomerate they would be striated in such a way by ’a late glacier of the Markarfljót valley. I was not able to detect a single stone in the conglomerate which I considered to have originally lain in it as a striated boulder, and in my view a proof of the morainic nature of the conglomerate is lacking. The conglomerate is covered by a very coarse breccia consisting mainly of unworn blocks of a porphyritic basalt, containing unusually large phenocrysts of plagioclase in great abundance. Parts of a lava of the same basalt are alstí seen and the breccia in all probability represents the crumbling of this lava, which pro- bably was heavily jointed and easily broken down (cf. later). Higher in the section occurs a confused mass, which in the main consists of irregular sheets of this same porphyritic basalt, and the first regular lava sheet, still of the same kind of basalt, is not met with until we reach the edge of the escarpment, 230 m. above sea level. To reach the edge of the main plateau mentioned at the outset, we have now to walk up a gently sloping terrain with but very little barelaid rock. Not until reaching the brook Merkiá at a height of about 400 m, could I follow clearly the volcanic series again. We find here a porphyritic lava similar to those at the base of the series. It is covered with many thin strata of sediments: a brown sandstone with veins of bog-iron, a darker stratified sandstone with thin layers of white rhyolite-pumice and a layer of very coarse sand- stone. These strata are all of nearly the same composition, namely subangular fragments of sideromelan and a few worn crystals of plagioclase (bytownite-labradorite) and augite, which appear to be phenocrysts originally enclosed in the glass. These sediments are most probably wind-blown sideromelan “ash”, thrown out by some nearby volcano. They do not on the other hand suggest any appreciable period of volcanic rest and weathering.

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Acta naturalia Islandica

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