Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 31

Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 31
ORIGIN OF TIIE BASIC TUFFS OF ICELAND 25 watery mass of fragments. Thus the interpretation of this section seems clear: A very thick lava flow consolidated partially as fine- grained lava and partially as a mass of glass which broke into pieces because of internal tension. Among the glass fragments in the slide two exceptionally large ones are of special interest. They are mostly opaque, but partially translucent and then indistinguishable from the neigbouring frag- ments of sideromelan. The two varieties of basic glass, tachylyte and sideromelan, are thus found in contact, and a sharp contact at that with each other. Proceeding westwards the brown breccia increases in the section and at Foss the over 100 m high escarpment is nearly wholly made up of this breccia: Angular lava cubes or polyhedrons in a brown matrix and it closely resembles the breccia clescribed at Hvammur. At Foss the matrix (287) is very similar to (286). Some of the glass fragments are here again partially opaque. The fragments are on the whole large, up to 10 mm, and there is no sign of a comminution of them as would result from transport. In some cases neigbouring fragments seem to fit into one another, indicating that they were not transported, either as “ash” through the air or as a mud flow, but represent a crumbled thick mass of glass. The ex- ceptionally thick lava flow simply seems to have consolidated partially as translucent glass, not because of some chilling external agency, but because of its own properties. Underlying the series is at Breiðabólstaður a grey conglomerate which I assume to be a mud flow. At Kirkjubæjarklaustur the whole escarpment, over 100 m high, is made up of brown tuffs in which fragments of lava and scoriae occur, especially near the top. Lower, this tuff contains large frag- ments of glass and unworn pebbles of lava of the size of a fist. A thin section (281) from a specimen taken at the small waterfall shows large angular fragments of sideromelan and a fragment of opaque glass, with enclosed phenocrysts. Some zeolitic matter occurs as cement. Another thin section (282) from the top of the series west of the farm contains large (about 5 mm) beautiful augular fragments of sideromelan, laterally altered. Smaller fragments are wholly altered into birefringent palagonite. Zeolites are abundant as cement and cause a whitish appearance in the hand-specimen. As at Þverárnúpur we find fragments which are partially opaque.

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Acta naturalia Islandica

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