Skeiðarársandur

View over Skeiðarársandur

Skeiðarársandur is an Icelandic outwash plain, a vast expanse of sand generated by the transport of debris by an icy river. In this case the flooding is generated by the Skeiðarárjökull glacier and fed by the volcanic systems of Grímsvötn and Öræfajökull.

The coastline of the Sandur is 56 km long (from Hvalsík to Hnappavallaós). From Skeiðarárjökull, the valley glacier of Vatnajökull, to the sea is 20-30 km.

The Skeiðará was the most important obstacle in the construction of Iceland's Route 1. It was not until 1974 that it could be completely closed by a 904 m long bridge. This is currently the longest bridge in Iceland. It was temporarily destroyed by water masses and blocks of ice during the last major glacier run in 1996, triggered by an eruption of the Grímsvötn volcano, but was immediately restored.

The outwash plain originated primarily as alluvial land, i.e. as an accumulation of sediments from the rivers mentioned. The sediments deposited here in the Holocene alone range from 100 to 200 km³.[1] However, volcanic eruptions of the volcanic systems of Grímsvötn and Öræfajökull on the other have contributed to these sediment deposits. The sediments were carried during so-called glacier runs with the glacier water, which thawed during volcanic eruptions, but also through ash deposits.

On the other hand, the outwash plain does not consist entirely of modern sediments. For example, there is also a cliff. In addition, geologists discovered a 100-150 m deep valley in the bedrock below the modern sediment layers, which was probably milled out by glacial rivers of the Ice Age, through seismological experiments. Over the last 10,000 years, the outwash plain has grown at a speed of about 1 km³/century.


See also

References

  1. T. Guðmundsson, Magnus. "Seismic soundings of sediment thickness on Skeiðarársandur, SE-Iceland" (PDF). Retrieved 29 May 2018.
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