Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 30

Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 30
24 TRAUSTI BINARSSON 4. SÍÐA AND FLJÓTSHVERFI The volcanic series of Tindafjöll, Eyjafjöll, and Mýrdalur are con- tinued to the east and north. They extend to the Skeiðarárjökull in the east and at least beyond Þórisvatn in the north. In all this area previous authors speak of the Palagonite Formation, and it is de- scribed as being in many ways quite similar to Tindafjöll and Eyja- fjöll. The formation is cut by the coastal plain in an escarpment of some- times appreciable height and here many excellent sections can be studied and the section of the series followed uninterruptedly over large distances. The character of the series is everywhere the same, a succession of very fine-grained lavas with columnar and poly- hedrous or block jointing and brown breccia to fine brown and green- ish tuffs, and the brown material is always 'composed of translucent brown or yellow glass and its alteration products: the darker pala- gonite, and the white zeolites. As far as I have been able to detect no signs of noteworthy interruptions of the volcanism are present nor are there any unmistakable signs of ice as an important factor in the formation of the brown glass. But here we are able to make many interesting observations of sideromelan on an original laver which lead to a fuller understanding of its formation. I shall now describe some observations more closely. In Síða, between Skál and Þverárnúpur the edge of the escarpment is made up of lava with block jointing, then below follows a brown layer of breccia and brown matter which further down turns into a lava of block jointing. Protuberances, not apophyses, extend from the lava up into the brown matter in such a way as to show clearly the genetic unity of both. We have here clearly a lava flow that con- solidated both as a very fine-grained lava and as a brown compact matter containing a varying amount of lava blocks. The brown matrix of the breccia is in a thin section (286) seen to consist of marginally altered angular fragments of sideromelan en- closing a few phenocrysts of plagioclase and olivine. A great abund- ance of zeolites and a little calcite occur as cement. There are both large and small fragments of glass, a common size being 5 mm, and I think there can be no doubt that they have resulted at this place from the crumbling of a compact mass of glass, but did not creep forth as a

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Acta naturalia Islandica

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