Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland

The Nesjahraun is a basaltic lava flow erupted from a subaerial fissure, extending NE along the Þingvellir graben from the Hengill central volcano that produced p?hoehoe lava followed by ‘a‘?. The Nesjahraun entered Iceland’s largest lake, Þingvallavatn, along its southern shore during both phases o...

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Main Authors: Stevenson, John Alexander, Mitchell, Neil Charles, Mochrie, Fiona, Cassidy, Michael, Pinkerton, Harry
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/338937/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:338937 2023-07-30T04:04:29+02:00 Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland Stevenson, John Alexander Mitchell, Neil Charles Mochrie, Fiona Cassidy, Michael Pinkerton, Harry 2012 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/338937/ unknown Stevenson, John Alexander, Mitchell, Neil Charles, Mochrie, Fiona, Cassidy, Michael and Pinkerton, Harry (2012) Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland. Bulletin of Volcanology, 74 (1), 33-46. (doi:10.1007/s00445-011-0480-1 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-011-0480-1>). Article PeerReviewed 2012 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T21:39:13Z The Nesjahraun is a basaltic lava flow erupted from a subaerial fissure, extending NE along the Þingvellir graben from the Hengill central volcano that produced p?hoehoe lava followed by ‘a‘?. The Nesjahraun entered Iceland’s largest lake, Þingvallavatn, along its southern shore during both phases of the eruption and exemplifies lava flowing into water in a lacustrine environment in the absence of powerful wave action. This study combines airborne light detection and ranging, sidescan sonar and Chirp seismic data with field observations to investigate the behaviour of the lava as it entered the water. P?hoehoe sheet lava was formed during the early stages of the eruption. Along the shoreline, stacks of thin (5–20 cm thick), vesicular, flows rest upon and surround low (<5 m) piles of coarse, unconsolidated, variably oxidised spatter. Clefts within the lava run inland from the lake. These are 2–5 m wide, >2 m deep, ?50 m long, spaced ?50 m apart and have sub-horizontal striations on the walls. They likely represent channels or collapsed tubes along which lava was delivered into the water. A circular rootless cone, Eldborg, formed when water infiltrated a lava tube. Offshore from the p?hoehoe lavas, the gradient of the flow surface steepens, suggesting a change in flow regime and the development of a talus ramp. Later, the flow was focused into a channel of ‘a‘? lava, ?200–350 m wide. This split into individual flow lobes 20–50 m wide along the shore. ‘A‘? clinker is exposed on the water’s edge, as well as glassy sand and gravel, which has been locally intruded by small (<1 m), irregularly shaped, lava bodies. The cores of the flow lobes contain coherent, but hackly fractured lava. Mounds consisting predominantly of scoria lapilli and the large paired half-cone of Grámelur were formed in phreatomagmatic explosions. The ‘a‘? flow can be identified underwater over 1 km offshore, and the sidescan data suggest that the flow lobes remained coherent flowing down a gradient of <10°. The Nesjahraun demonstrates ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Þingvallavatn University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Eldborg ENVELOPE(-22.000,-22.000,63.867,63.867) Hengill ENVELOPE(-21.306,-21.306,64.078,64.078) 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 The Nesjahraun is a basaltic lava flow erupted from a subaerial fissure, extending NE along the Þingvellir graben from the Hengill central volcano that produced p?hoehoe lava followed by ‘a‘?. The Nesjahraun entered Iceland’s largest lake, Þingvallavatn, along its southern shore during both phases of the eruption and exemplifies lava flowing into water in a lacustrine environment in the absence of powerful wave action. This study combines airborne light detection and ranging, sidescan sonar and Chirp seismic data with field observations to investigate the behaviour of the lava as it entered the water. P?hoehoe sheet lava was formed during the early stages of the eruption. Along the shoreline, stacks of thin (5–20 cm thick), vesicular, flows rest upon and surround low (<5 m) piles of coarse, unconsolidated, variably oxidised spatter. Clefts within the lava run inland from the lake. These are 2–5 m wide, >2 m deep, ?50 m long, spaced ?50 m apart and have sub-horizontal striations on the walls. They likely represent channels or collapsed tubes along which lava was delivered into the water. A circular rootless cone, Eldborg, formed when water infiltrated a lava tube. Offshore from the p?hoehoe lavas, the gradient of the flow surface steepens, suggesting a change in flow regime and the development of a talus ramp. Later, the flow was focused into a channel of ‘a‘? lava, ?200–350 m wide. This split into individual flow lobes 20–50 m wide along the shore. ‘A‘? clinker is exposed on the water’s edge, as well as glassy sand and gravel, which has been locally intruded by small (<1 m), irregularly shaped, lava bodies. The cores of the flow lobes contain coherent, but hackly fractured lava. Mounds consisting predominantly of scoria lapilli and the large paired half-cone of Grámelur were formed in phreatomagmatic explosions. The ‘a‘? flow can be identified underwater over 1 km offshore, and the sidescan data suggest that the flow lobes remained coherent flowing down a gradient of <10°. The Nesjahraun demonstrates ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Stevenson, John Alexander
Mitchell, Neil Charles
Mochrie, Fiona
Cassidy, Michael
Pinkerton, Harry
spellingShingle Stevenson, John Alexander
Mitchell, Neil Charles
Mochrie, Fiona
Cassidy, Michael
Pinkerton, Harry
Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
author_facet Stevenson, John Alexander
Mitchell, Neil Charles
Mochrie, Fiona
Cassidy, Michael
Pinkerton, Harry
author_sort Stevenson, John Alexander
title Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_short Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_full Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_fullStr Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
title_sort lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the nesjahraun, þingvellir, iceland
publishDate 2012
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/338937/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-22.000,-22.000,63.867,63.867)
ENVELOPE(-21.306,-21.306,64.078,64.078)
ENVELOPE(-21.150,-21.150,64.183,64.183)
geographic Eldborg
Hengill
Þingvallavatn
geographic_facet Eldborg
Hengill
Þingvallavatn
genre Iceland
Þingvallavatn
genre_facet Iceland
Þingvallavatn
op_relation Stevenson, John Alexander, Mitchell, Neil Charles, Mochrie, Fiona, Cassidy, Michael and Pinkerton, Harry (2012) Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of p?hoehoe and ‘a‘? at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland. Bulletin of Volcanology, 74 (1), 33-46. (doi:10.1007/s00445-011-0480-1 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-011-0480-1>).
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