Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 76

Acta naturalia Islandica - 01.02.1946, Side 76
70 TRAUSTI EINARSSON very swollen during the summer ancl he had not the impression in the summer 1934 that the river was so unusually swollen as to warrant the assumption of an eruption in the glacier at its source. I believe that so long as no attempt has been made to parallelize the flood of the river with a cold weather period it has little bearing upon a supposed sub-glacial eruption. Another fact that should be taken into account is, that if at the source of the river the extrusion of the loose masses of a palagonite breccia took place accompanied by the production of a great body of melt water, we might expect that the river carried away and deposited along its banks a perceptible amount of these eruptives. But nothing of the kind has been observed. As to the subsidence itself, it extends, according to Dr. Nielsen, in his book Vatnajökull, over a zone 10 km long and a couple of km broad. It lies along the very active volcanic line of Grímsvötn and it occurred about 2 months after the great eruption of Grímsvötn in 1934. It might therefore be supposed that this disturbance of the glacier was in some way connected with the great eruption, without necessarily being caused by a sub-glacial extrusion, and when we learn from Nielsen’s book that the disturbance extended right down to the margin of the glacier where nevertheless no signs of an eruption were seen, it would seem that the sub-glacial extrusion hypothesis is inadequate. On the other hand it seems a more simple explanation that earthquakes caused a slight run-off of this part of the glacier which lies on a sloping ground. By thorough studies it might have been possible to decide upon the cause of the disturbance, but unfortunately observations are scant and we are left to guess the best hypothesis. This disturbance of the glacier is at any rate no proof of a “slow” subglacial extrusion and it can still less be used as a basis for a theory according to which the basic tuffs of Iceland are largely formed by “slow” sub-glacial extrusion. Noe-Nygaard reports that he found the products of recent sub- glacial eruptions, i. e. globular basalt. But his deduction of this result is not convincing. First he shows clearly that in earlier post- glacial times the Vatnajökull was smaller than to-day. Thereupon he states that a globular basalt, which he assumes to be of recent age and lies outside the present margin of the glacier is of sub-glacial origin. Then we learn that “following the globular basalt in a

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Acta naturalia Islandica

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