Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 50

Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 50
44 TRAUSTI EINARSSON There is no indication of a notable transport of these glass frag- ments. Further, the absence or low degree of porosity seems to indi- cate that these tuffs are not the result of explosive eruptions. Most probably they either represent lava flows consolidating entirely as glass and crumbling into pieces on cooling or, what seems more likely, they are streams of a mixture of glass fragments — erupted sandflows. The dolerite on the top of the mountain in hand-specimen closely resembles the dolerite of Reykjavík as remarked by Thoroddsen. In thin section (391) it is practically identical with the ophitic dolerite of Reykjavík. There remains to be mentioned an interesting feature in the mountain slope some 100 m east of Austurgil. This is a stream of breccia running down the slope. It consists of dark lava fragments of distorted forms and a matrix of brown matter of varying percent- age. In thin section (369) this matrix is seen to have orginally been a somewhat porous unfragmented mass of sideromelan contain- ing a few phenocrysts of olivine. A great deal of the glass is now altered into faintly birefringent palagonite, only scattered patches of unaltered sideromelan being left. This is clearly a lava flow con- solidating partly in a fine-grained form and partly as massive glass, and as far as I can see this flow ran down the present side of the valley and should thus be relatively recent. 7. MIDDLE NORTHERN ICELAND The high mountainous area on both sides of Eyjafjörður was earlier considered to be built up of a Tertiary Basalt Formation. According to Pjeturss’ system, however, the higher reaches of these mountains consist of Quaternary rocks, as we have already men- tioned in the introductory remarks. It has often been stated, among others by Paijkull, Kjerulf, Thoroddsen and Pjeturss that the basalts crowning these mountains are light-coloured and porous and very similar in appearance to the basalts of Southern Iceland, but it was not until Pjeturss’ discovery of grey conglomerates of morainic appearance in the basalts of the North, i. e. at an elevation of about 700 m in the mountains of Fnjóskadalur, that a Quaternary age was assumed as for the rocks of Southern Iceland.

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Acta naturalia Islandica

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