Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 23

Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 23
ORIGIN OF THE BASIC TUFFS OF ICELAND 17 There yet remains to be mentioned one of the strata, not thicker than 1 m, a dark-grey conglomerate with small rounded pebbles of basalt. This conglomerate has all the characteristics of Pjeturss’ moraines, with the exception that no striated pebbles were found. Its position suggests moreover that it might correspond to Pjeturss’ higher moraine at Barkarstaðir. Studying a thin section (256) I was, however, rather surprised to find that the groundmass of this conglomerate consists mainly of worn fragments of palagonite and dark glass, although worn grains of basaltic lavas and an abundance of minute fragments of plagioclase and augite are also present. The material of this conglomerate, so markedly morainic in appear- ance, is thus mainly of a glassy nature, not exactly what one should expect to find in a groundmoraine embedded in a series of basaltic lavas. Furthermore a consideration of these thin glassy sediments as a whole does not suggest the existence of a glacier as a creative agency. I think it is more natural to consider the conglomerate and the sedi- rnents as a whole as a link in the volcanic series rather than a break, especially a break of such magnitude as a glaciation. In my view the conglomerate may represent a volcanic mud flow but this question will be discussed in more detail later. This assumption is in accord- ance with the absence of structure, the wearing of the material, and its composition, and even the eventual presence of a few more or less indistinctly scratched stones would, I think, hardly be very surpris- ing. Walking up along the brook we again meet with a grey basaltic lava and a similar conglomerate as before, and this is probably higher in the series as no dislocations could be seen. Yet this is not quite clear. At last we arrive at a deep terminal gorge eroded by the brook into an enormous basaltic layer of a thickness no less than 100 m. It forms the edge of the main plateau. This lava is a dark, extreme- ly fine-grained basalt, which by consolidation has been jointed in such a way that it is almost wholly built up of innumerable cubes or polyhedrons with an average size of about 1 — 2 dm3. Only near the top of the lava is this peculiar jointing replaced by vertical columns. At a few places the lava encloses patches of brown palagonite. This lava is obviously very easily broken up and we have already Origin of the basic tuffs of Iceland 2

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Acta naturalia Islandica

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