Author:
Gudmundsson Magnús T.,Janebo Maria H.,Larsen Guðrún,Högnadóttir Thórdís,Thordarson Thorvaldur,Gudnason Jónas,Jónsdóttir Tinna
Abstract
Due to poor preservation and lack of proximal tephra thickness data, no comprehensive isopach map has existed for the tephra layer from the major eruption of the Katla volcano in 1918. We present such a map obtained by combining existing data on the thickness of the 1918 tephra in soil profiles with newly acquired data from the 590 km² Mýrdalsjökull ice cap which covers the Katla caldera and its outer slopes. A tephra thickness of 20–30 m on the ice surface proximal to the vents is inferred from photos taken in 1919. The greatest thicknesses presently observed, 30–35 cm, occur where the layer outcrops in the lowermost parts of the ablation areas of the Kötlujökull and Sólheimajökull outlet glaciers. A fallout location within the Katla caldera is inferred for the presently exposed tephra in both outlet glaciers, as estimates of balance velocities imply lateral transport since 1918 of ∼15 km for Kötlujökull, ∼11 km for Sólheimajökull and about 2 km for Sléttjökull. Calculations of thinning of the tephra layer during this lateral transport indicate that the presently exposed tephra layers in Kötlujökull and Sólheimajökull were respectively over 2 m and about 1.2 m thick where they fell while insignificant thinning is inferred for the broad northern lobe of Sléttjökull. The K1918 layer has an estimated volume of 0.95±0.25 km³ (corresponding to 1.15±0.30×1012 kg) whereof about 50\% fell on Mýrdalsjökull. About 90\% of the tephra fell on land and 10\% in the sea to the south and southeast of the volcano. The volume estimate obtained contains only a part of the total volume erupted as it excludes water-transported pyroclasts and any material that may have been left on the glacier bed at the vents. While three main dispersal axes can be defined (N, NE and SE), the distribution map is complex in shape reflecting tephra dispersal over a period of variable wind directions and eruption intensity. In terms of airborne tephra, Katla 1918 is the largest explosive eruption in Iceland since the silicic eruption of Askja in 1875.
Publisher
Joklarannsoknafelag Islands
Subject
Geography, Planning and Development,Global and Planetary Change,Literature and Literary Theory,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Literature and Literary Theory,Philosophy,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Cultural Studies,General Computer Science,Artificial Intelligence,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Theoretical Computer Science,Software,Hardware and Architecture,Theoretical Computer Science,Software,Infectious Diseases,Parasitology,Epidemiology,Immunology,Parasitology,Infectious Diseases,Parasitology,Infectious Diseases,Parasitology
Cited by
3 articles.
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