Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 60

Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 60
54 ORIGIN OF THE BASIC TUFFS OF ICELAND 8. THE YOUNGER BASIC TUFFS In the Tinclafjöll complex we observed a pile of brown tuffs and breccias covering the main plateau of alternating lavas and layers of fragmental material. Obviously this pile is a remnant of a more extensive thick cover. At Hvalf jörður we similarly found that Hval- fell and Botnssúlur represent remnants of a very thick pile of brown fragmental material, directly covering the series of composite com- position. Similar masses of palagonite tuffs are of great extent in other parts of Iceland and, in fact, form the main mass of the Palagonite Formation. The whole mountain range from Cape Reykjanes to Lang- jökull is mostly built up of this material. Furthermore Hofsjökull is a similar pile resting on the composite plateau which we described as running from Southern to Middle Northern Iceland. The same may be said of all the separate mountains to the north of Vatna- jökull: Dyngjufjöll, Herðubreið, Herðubreiðarfjöll, Bláfjall, Sellanda- fjall, Gæsafjöll, Lambafjöll, and last but not least the vast pile of Hólsfjöll covering an area of about 3500 km2. At many places it is seen that this thick cover rests on a series of alternating lavas of grey, mostly fine-grained and porous porphyritic basalt, and layers of brown glassy material. On a great many of these remnants there is, as on Botnssúlur, a relatively thin cover of ophitic olivine-dolerite. In many cases also the craters which produced this dolerite are still preserved, even in a fresh condition, and in one case, on Skriða, I have found that the last flow from such a crater consists entirely of glass, mainly sidero- melan. It is clear that at least a part of these fragmental masses are very young and large parts of them are demonstrably séparated from the composite series by a long interval, as the tuffs of Hólsfjöll and the breccia masses of Ingólfsfjall among others which rest discordantly on the lower series. We may therefore distinguish this thick cover as the Younger Tuffs of relatively late origin. In Snæfellsnes a thick pile of tuffs overlies beds with arctic molluscs as found by Pjeturss and we may assume that the Younger Tuffs are mostly or wholly of Quaternary age. In spite of this their origin need not be directly connected with

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Acta naturalia Islandica

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