Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland

This study describes the emplacement of the Nesjahraun, a basaltic lava flow that entered the lake Þingvallavatn, SW Iceland. High-resolution remotely sensed data were combined with fieldwork to map the flow field. Onshore, the Nesjahraun exhibits a variety of textures related to the widespread infl...

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Main Authors: Stevenson, John Alexander, Mitchell, Neil Charles, Cassidy, Michael, Pinkerton, Harry
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/338935/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:338935 2023-07-30T04:04:22+02:00 Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland Stevenson, John Alexander Mitchell, Neil Charles Cassidy, Michael Pinkerton, Harry 2012 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/338935/ unknown Stevenson, John Alexander, Mitchell, Neil Charles, Cassidy, Michael and Pinkerton, Harry (2012) Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland. Bulletin of Volcanology, 74 (1), 15-31. (doi:10.1007/s00445-011-0482-z <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-011-0482-z>). Article PeerReviewed 2012 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T21:39:09Z This study describes the emplacement of the Nesjahraun, a basaltic lava flow that entered the lake Þingvallavatn, SW Iceland. High-resolution remotely sensed data were combined with fieldwork to map the flow field. Onshore, the Nesjahraun exhibits a variety of textures related to the widespread inflation and collapse of a p?hoehoe flow field. Its emplacement is interpreted as follows: Initially, the eruption produced sheet p?hoehoe. In the central part of the flow field, the lava has a platy-ridged surface, which is similar to some other lava flows in Iceland and on Mars. Here, the texture is interpreted to have formed by unsteady inflation of the brittle crust of stationary sheet p?hoehoe, causing it to break into separate plates. The ridges of broken p?hoehoe slabs formed as the plates of crust moved vertically past each other in a process similar to the formation of shatter rings. Upstream, fresh lava overflowed repeatedly from channels and tubes, covering the surface with shelly p?hoehoe. Formation of a 250-m-wide open channel through the flow field allowed the inflated central part of the flow to drain rapidly. This phase produced ‘a‘? lava, which eroded the channel walls, carrying broken p?hoehoe slabs, lava balls and detaching large (>200 m long) rafts of compound shelly p?hoehoe lava. Much of this channelized lava flowed into the lake, leaving a network of drained channels and tubes in the upstream part of the flow. As in other locations, the platy-ridged texture is associated with a low underlying slope and high eruption rate. Here, its formation was possibly enhanced by lateral confinement, hindered entry into the lake and an elevated vent location. We suggest that formation of this type of platy-ridged lava, where the plates are smooth and the ridges are slabs of broken p?hoehoe, can occur without significant horizontal transport, as the surface crust is broken into plates in situ. This reconstruction of the emplacement of the Nesjahraun also demonstrates that high-resolution aerial survey data are ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Þingvallavatn University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Þingvallavatn ENVELOPE(-21.150,-21.150,64.183,64.183)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language unknown
description This study describes the emplacement of the Nesjahraun, a basaltic lava flow that entered the lake Þingvallavatn, SW Iceland. High-resolution remotely sensed data were combined with fieldwork to map the flow field. Onshore, the Nesjahraun exhibits a variety of textures related to the widespread inflation and collapse of a p?hoehoe flow field. Its emplacement is interpreted as follows: Initially, the eruption produced sheet p?hoehoe. In the central part of the flow field, the lava has a platy-ridged surface, which is similar to some other lava flows in Iceland and on Mars. Here, the texture is interpreted to have formed by unsteady inflation of the brittle crust of stationary sheet p?hoehoe, causing it to break into separate plates. The ridges of broken p?hoehoe slabs formed as the plates of crust moved vertically past each other in a process similar to the formation of shatter rings. Upstream, fresh lava overflowed repeatedly from channels and tubes, covering the surface with shelly p?hoehoe. Formation of a 250-m-wide open channel through the flow field allowed the inflated central part of the flow to drain rapidly. This phase produced ‘a‘? lava, which eroded the channel walls, carrying broken p?hoehoe slabs, lava balls and detaching large (>200 m long) rafts of compound shelly p?hoehoe lava. Much of this channelized lava flowed into the lake, leaving a network of drained channels and tubes in the upstream part of the flow. As in other locations, the platy-ridged texture is associated with a low underlying slope and high eruption rate. Here, its formation was possibly enhanced by lateral confinement, hindered entry into the lake and an elevated vent location. We suggest that formation of this type of platy-ridged lava, where the plates are smooth and the ridges are slabs of broken p?hoehoe, can occur without significant horizontal transport, as the surface crust is broken into plates in situ. This reconstruction of the emplacement of the Nesjahraun also demonstrates that high-resolution aerial survey data are ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Stevenson, John Alexander
Mitchell, Neil Charles
Cassidy, Michael
Pinkerton, Harry
spellingShingle Stevenson, John Alexander
Mitchell, Neil Charles
Cassidy, Michael
Pinkerton, Harry
Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
author_facet Stevenson, John Alexander
Mitchell, Neil Charles
Cassidy, Michael
Pinkerton, Harry
author_sort Stevenson, John Alexander
title Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_short Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_full Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_fullStr Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_sort widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the nesjahraun, þingvellir, iceland
publishDate 2012
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/338935/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-21.150,-21.150,64.183,64.183)
geographic Þingvallavatn
geographic_facet Þingvallavatn
genre Iceland
Þingvallavatn
genre_facet Iceland
Þingvallavatn
op_relation Stevenson, John Alexander, Mitchell, Neil Charles, Cassidy, Michael and Pinkerton, Harry (2012) Widespread inflation and drainage of a p?hoehoe flow field: the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland. Bulletin of Volcanology, 74 (1), 15-31. (doi:10.1007/s00445-011-0482-z <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-011-0482-z>).
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