Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-14T16:21:00.824Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Scales and rates of glacial sediment removal: a 20 km long, 300 m deep trench created beneath Breiðamerkurjökull during the Little Ice Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Helgi Björnsson*
Affiliation:
Science Institute, University of Iceland, Dunhagi 3, 107, Iceland
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

A 20 km long, 2-5 km wide trench, which extends to 300 m below sea level, is believed to have been created by removal of sediment during the advance of Breiðamerkurjökull in the Little Ice Age. Between 1732 and 1890, the glacier advanced by 9 km, covered an area of 45 km2 and excavated a volume of 5 × 109 m3, equivalent to an average of 110 m over this area. Average sediment-removal rate during the 158 years was 32 × 106 m3 a−1 or 0.7 m a−1 km−2 averaged over the area covered by the advancing glacier. Calculated over the whole drainage area of the eastern branch of the glacier of 750 km2, the denudation rate would be 4 × 10−2 m a−1 km−2. Fluvial processes are estimated to have carried about 30 × 106 m3 a−1, and the sediment fluxes within the ice and by the deforming subglacial till are estimated to be 105 and 106 m3 a−1, respectively. The average sediment concentration in the glacial streams would have been about 10 kg m−3. Such concentrations have been measured in Icelandic rivers during jökulhlaups and surges. Several surging events took place during the advance of Breiðamerkurjökull, and jökulhlaups drain regularly beneath the glacier from ice-dammed marginal lakes. The present rate of transport, although considerable, seems to be about 10 × 106 m3 a−1, of which 30% is transported by the river to the sea and 70% is dumped into a proglacial lake.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1996

Introduction

Breiðamerkurjökull is located in the highly maritime climate of southeast Iceland and is one of the most active outlet glaciers of the ice cap Vatnajökull (Fig. 1). The outlet flows down to the coastal sandur delta Breiðamerk-ursandur, which is believed to be composed of a wedge of late-Weichselian and Holocence Sediments (Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others, 1982). Since the settlement of Iceland 1100 years ago, large glacier variations and major glacially induced changes in landscape have taken place in the Breiðamerk-urjökull area. At the time of the settlement much land which is now largely covered by Breiðamerkurjökull was vegetated and occupied by several farms. Dining the cold period between the Middle Ages and the end of the last century (the Little Ice Age), the glacier outlet advanced maybe 10-15 km, devastating vegetation and ruining the farms. This advance and its consequences are well known and historically documented in medieval annals, county records, journals of churches, travel accounts and geographical maps (Reference HendersonHenderson, 1818; Reference ThienemannThienemann, 1824; Reference PáassonPálsson, 1883, Reference Pálsson1945; Reference ThoroddsenThoroddsen, 1892, Reference Thoroddsen1905/06; Reference BárðarsonBárðarson, 1934;Reference ThorarinssonThórarinsson, 1943, Reference Thorarinsson and Lindal1974; Reference NörlundNörlund, 1944; Reference SigurðssonSigurðsson, 1978). This saga is presented here.

Fig. 1. Breiðamerkurjökull and surroundings. The outlet is divided into three branches by two medial moraines. Contour heights are given in metres above sea level.

During the retreat of the glacier in the 20th century, land has reappeared, revealing changes since the settlement (see Reference Howarth and PriceHowarth and Price, 1969; Reference PricePrice, 1971, Reference Price1982). The most outstanding new feature is a large proglacial lake (Jökulsárlón) where there was farmland before the advance. This lake basin is considered to have been excavated by the advancing glacier, and bears witness to exceptionally high rates of sediment removal since about 1800 (Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others, 1982).

New radio-echo soundings of the glacier itself show that ice is still hiding landforms created during the neoglacial advance. These changes in landscape give an even mote spectacular insight into the landscaping power of the glacier: a 20 km long trench, 2-5 kin wide, which is up to 300 m below sea level. We believe this trench to have been created by removal of sediment during the advance of the glacier during the Little Ice Age, i.e. after AD I 1400.

This paper describes the evidence for this statement and discusses glacial, subglacial and fluvioglacial processes responsible for the excavation of the trench and the transport of sediment to the sea.

Description of Breiđamerkurjökull and Breiđamerkursandur

Breiðamerkurjökull (total area A = 910 km2, accumulation area Ac = 500 km2, ablation area Aa = 410 km2) is bounded to the west by the huge volcano Öræfajökull (2119 m a.s.l.), to the north by the nunataks Mávabyggoðir and Esjufjöll and to the east by Veðurárdalsfjöll, all reaching elevations of more than 1300 m (Fig. 1). The northeastern part of the outlet drains from the ice dome Breiðabunga through a pass between Esjufjöll and Veðurárdalsfjöll. The present equilibrium line lies at an elevation of 1100 m. The climate is highly maritime with net mass balance of 4-7 m a−1 in the uppermost accumulation area and ablation of about 10 m a−1 at the terminus (50 m elevation) where the annual precipitation is about 2000 mm.

Breiðamerkurjökull can be divided into three lobes or branches which are separated by medial moraines that originate from the minataks Mávabyggðir and Esjufjöll and related valley glacier (Figs 13).

Fig. 2. The bedrock topography of Breiöamerkurjökull, surveyed by radio-echo soundings (Reference Björnsson, Páilssun and GuðmundssonBjörnsson and others, 1992). Contains in metres.

Fig. 3. Perspective Plots of the sub-ice topography of Breiöamerkurjökull. View towards the north. Vertical exaggeration ten times horizontal.

Western Branch

The western branch (A = 160 km2, Ac = 60 km2, Aa = 100 km2, and 18 km measured along a central flowline) falls steeply from the northeastern slopes of Öræfajökull towards a calving front at the proglacial lake Breiðárlón (15 m a.s.l), The river Breiðá flows from the lake. The branch is bounded to the north by the uuualaks and the medial moraine of Mávabyggðir. The bed is irregular, showing signs of substantial valley erosion, and only beneath the outermost 4 km of the outlet does the bed form a sandur plain below 100 m elevation (Figs 2 and 3; Reference Björnsson, Páilssun and GuðmundssonBjörnsson and others, 1992). Northeastwards from Breiðárlón a trench, 7 km long and up to 1 km wide, extends below sea level. Another depression below sea level is located 2 km north of Breiöárlón and does not reach the present glacier margin. An ice-dammed lake by Breiðamerkurfjall, drains beneath the western branch down to Breiöárlón (Fig. 1).

Central Branch

The central branch (A = 210 km2, A c = 100 km2, A a = 110 km2, and 26 km long) is bounded by the nunataks Mávabyggðir and Esjufjöll and their medial moraines. Most of the bed is formed of glacially sculptured mountains, but a 3 km wide plain below the 100 m contour stretches 10 km up-glacier beneath the tongue. No river drains from the front as the meltwater is drained towards the eastern branch.

Eastern Branch

The eastern branch (A = 540 km2, Ac = 340 km2, Aa = 200 km2) drains from Breiðabunga (1500 m a.s.l.), 34 km down to a calving front at the proglacial Lake Jökulsár-lón. The accumulation area is situated in the central part of Vatnajðkull where the glacier bed is above 500 m a.s.l., from where the ice flows steeply down to a low-lying ablation area. About half of the bed in the ablation area is below 100 m, and this contour extends 25 km up-glacier from the front (Figs 2 and 3). We suggest from this sub-ice information that a sandur field (a sediment wedge), reaching to the nunataks Esjufjðll and the central highland northeast of Esjufjöll, was formed in postglacial times (Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others, 1982). The present glacier bed in this area, however, slopes rapidly down and forms a trench which extends below sea level over a distance of 20 km down to Jökulsárlón. The maximum depth of this trench is 300 m below sea level, 2-3 km up-glacier from Jökulsárlón where the ice is 300-400 m thick.

The area exposed from beneath the retreating glacier since the Little Ice Age consists of a consolidated mixture of till and sand. Seismic refraction on Breiðamerkursandur near the snout of the glacier (Bogadóttir and others, 1986) and reflection profiles in the lake Jökulsárlón (Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others, 1982) suggest that the margin of the glacier and the foreland are underlain by glacial drift. In the coastal area the bedrock is overlain by moraines (40 m thick) and topped by sand. In front of the lake Jökulsárlón the depth down to the bedrock is 130-140 m, and the maximum depth of the present lake is 190 m. In other parts of Breiðamerkursandur the depth to the bedrock is 30–80 m. The trench is located in a glacially eroded bedrock valley which extends as Breiða-merkurdjúp southeast of the river mouth of Jökulsá, 60 km to the edge of the continental edge (see Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others, 1982, Reference Boulton, Thors and Jarvis.1989). We suggest that the trench beneath the glacier may reach down to bedrock in the deepest parts, but the sides of the trench consist of unconsolidated sediments.

Hydrology

Water drains to the proglacial lake Jökulsárlón from a basal drainage area of 750 km2. The glacier receives enormous amounts of water through rainfall. Maximum rainfall intensity recorded is 230 mm in 24 h at the margin. Surface runoff flows into moulins down to the glacier base in the lower three-quarters of the ablation area. The river Jökulsá flows from the lake Jökulsárlón. The mean annual discharge from the glacier to the river Jökulsá is 130 m3 s−1, but daily peak values of 750 m3 s−1 have been recorded. The flow of water from the glacier reaches its highest levels between July and mid-September. Discharge may fluctuate rapidly and jökulh-laups are frequent from two lakes which are dammed at the eastern margin of Breiðamerkurjökull.

Only small amounts of supraglacial debris are found on the glacier, and nearly all the sediment supplied to the streams appears to be derived from subglacial drift. Most of the sediment load is presently dumped into the lake. Typically, suspended-sediment loads carried by the river Jökulsá are 1.5 kg m−3 (Reference RistRist, 1957; personal communication from L. S. Zóphóniassoii, 1995). Data on bedload are not available.

Changes of Breiđamerkurjökull and Breiđamerkursandur in Historical Times

Changes of Glaciers

During the climatically mild period of the settlement of Iceland (AD 874-930) and for several centuries thereafter, the glacier outlets of Vatnajökull were substantially shorter than they have been for the last three to four centuries (see Reference ThorarinssonThórarinsson, 1943). Reference Tómasson and Vilmundardóttir.Tómasson and Vilmundardóttir (1967) believe that the outlet glaciers of Vatnajökull may have been up to 20 km further back at the time of the settlement than they now are. The land adjacent to and now covered by Breiðamerkurjökll was settled and occupied by farms and covered with vegetation. At that time several valley glaciers may have flowed down to Breiðamerkursandur, but most of the flat area below the 100 m contour of the bed would have been free of ice. In that case, no ice-dammed lake would have existed in Veðurárdalur, nor would a lake be dammed in Breiðamerkurljall (Fig. 1).

A climatic deterioration set in during the 12th century. From about 1300 to 1900 the climate was cold, especially after 1600 which was presumably the coldest period in postglacial times. Eythórsson (see Reference AhlmannAhlmann, 1953, p.31) estimated that the firn line on southern Vatnajökull declined from about 1100 m around AD 1000-1100 to about 750 m elevation by 1650. This caused glacier advance which gradually destroyed the framing area. Prosperous firms were still reported in 1343 (Reference BárðarsonBárðarson, 1934, p. 28). but the glacier started to advance after AD 1400, with accelerating pace in the 17th century until Breiöamerkurjökull reached its postglacial maximum in the 1890s. Two farms, Fjall and Breiðá, on the western side of Breiðamerkursandur were abandoned in the 1690s and shortly after AD 1700, respectively, because the glacier advanced over the pastures near the farm houses. On the eastern side the farm Brenuhólar was overrun by ice in 1753, and Fell, which was protected by a Large moraine, was destroyed in 1865 when the moraine was breached by the glacier (Reference ThoroddsenThoroddsen, 1892, Reference Thoroddsen1905/06).

The variations of the eastern branch of Breiðameik-urjökull, by the present river outlet of Jökulsá, are summarized in Figure 4. Altogether the glacier advanced by 9 km between 1730 and 1890. Several rapid advances have been described, which are definitely surges. In 1794, the eastern part of Breiöamerkurjökull advanced 400 m between Whitsun and August, according to Reference PálssonPálsson (1945, p. 358). During 1820 the glacier advanced by 1 km (in some days by 4-8 m) according to Thienemann (1824), while large masses of water poured From underneath the glacier, which started to retreat shortly afterwards. Inhabitants told Thienemann that such rapid advances occurred approximately every fifth year, followed by recession. During the period 1794-1820 alternating rapid advances and slow recessions took place (Reference ThorarinssonThórarinsson, 1943). In 1869 an advance similar to that of 1820 took place and the glacier almost reached the sea (Reference Norðanfari.Norðanfari, 1870). In 1875 a rapid advance was reported and the inhabitants feared the glacier would reach the sea (Reference WattsWatts, 1876). The last advance of this nature was reported in the early years of this century (personal communication from S. Björnsson, 1995).

Fig. 4. Changen in the Position of the front of Breiöamerkurjökull at the Jökulsá river (with reference to the position in 1735).

Changes in the Sandur Field

Large landscape changes have taken place on Breiðamerkursandur during historical times in association with the glacier variations. The area has changed from a vegetated area (called Breiðamörk) to a glacial sandur area. The presence of large lakes, like the ones found in the present proglacial area, is neither mentioned in written records nor shown on maps (Reference PáassonPálsson, 1883, Reference Pálsson1945; Reference ThoroddsenThoroddsen, 1892, Reference Thoroddsen1905/06; Reference ThorarinssonThórarinsson, 1943; see Reference NörlundNörtund (1944) and Reference SigurðssonSigurðsson (1978) for information about the maps of Knoff (from 1732), Pálsson (from 1794), Gunnlaugsson (from 1834) and the Danish Geodetic Survey (from 1903/04)). Therefore we conclude that the trench was excavated during the glacier advance of the Little lce Age.

The volume of the proglacial moraines which were piled up is a negligible proportion of the volume removed from the glacier bed when the trench was formed. The volume of the moraines is only of the order of 15 × 106 m3 (15 m high, 200 m in the down-glacier direction and about 5 km wide across the front of the trench). Assuming, conservatively, the present porosity of 0.2 for this deposited material and 0.4 for deformable till beneath the glacier, the moraines account for about 20 × 106 m3 (0.4%) of the volume removed from the trench. The main part of the excavated material was transported by proglacial rivers to the sea, building an outwash fan beyond the mouth of the river Jökulsá. From 1817 to 1904 the coastline moved seawards by 1100 m due to accumulation of sediments from the glacier in excess of what the littoral currents were able to carry away (Fig. 5).

Fig. 5. Changes in the position of the coastline at Breiðamerkursendur according to maps of 1817 (the same as on Gunnlaugsson map of 1834; see Reference SigurðssonSigurðsson, 1978), 1904 (Danish Geodetic Survey) and 1989 (Icelandic Geodetic Survey ).

The river Jökulsá (meaning glacial river), first mentioned in the Land Intake Book, became gradually shorter as the glacier advanced, in spite of the seaward movement of the coastline.

The proglacial lake Jöklsárl:n, first visible in 1932, has expanded during continous retreat of the glacier. In 1975 a bathymetric survey of the lake was undertaken. The lake area was 7.9 km2 and the estimated volume was 500 × 106 m3 (Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others, 1982). In 1991 its area was 10.4 km2.

Since the formation of Jökulsárlón in the 1930s, the shore off the river outlet has been retreating because the sediment load from the glacier has been largely dumped into the lake, and only a small amount added to the coast by the river. Comparison of maps from 1904 and 1989 shows that the coastline has retreated over a distance of 4 km on both sides of the river outlet (Fig. 5). The maximum shoreline erosion has been 700 m in 85 years, an average of 8.5 m a−1. The retreat from 1945 to 1989 was similar (Reference VíkingssonVíkingsson, 1991; Reference Jóannesson and ViggosonJóhannesson, 1994).

Removal of Sediment Beneath Breiđamerkurjökull

Sediment-Removal Rates

The discovery of the trench beneath the eastern branch of Breiðamerkurjökull and information on the glacier advance make it possible to evaluate rates of excavation and transport of sediments from beneath that glacier during the Little Ice Age. We assume that before the glacier advance the surface of the sandur field where the trench is now located had a slope similar to that of the surroundings of the present trench.

During the period 1732-1890, the glacier advanced by 9 km, covered an area of 45 km2 and excavated a volume of 5 × 109 m3 or 110 m averaged over this arca. A uniform sediment-removal rate during the glacier advance of 158 years was 32 × 106 m3 a−1 or 0.7 m a−1 km−2 averaged over the area covered by the advancing glacier. Calculated over the whole drainage area of the eastern branch of 750 km2, the denudation rate would be 4 × 10−2 m a−1 km−2. These removal rates are exceptionally high by any standard. Similar calculations for other time-spans are given in Table 1, assuming that the advancing glacier pushed forward and replaced the whole volume of the respective part of the trench (Fig. 6). For the shorter time-spans this assumption is questionable. The lowest estimate for the removal rate is obtained if we assume the whole 20 km long trench was excavated during 800 years, after the settlement of Iceland.

Fig. 6. Schematic sections along a central flowline of the eastern brunch of Breiöamerkurjökull at particular times between 1730 and 1990.

Table 1. Estimated maximum rates of sediment transport from the eastern branch of Breiöamerkurjökull

Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others (1982) concluded that the basin of the proglacial lake Jökulsárlón was created when Breiöamerkurjökull advanced over Breiðamerkursandur in the 18th and 19th centuries. Hence, the volume of 500 × 106 m3 of sediments was excavated in 130-175 years at most. This is equivalent to a layer of 64 m being removed, averaged over the whole lake area, at a minimum rate of 0.37 m a−1. Thus, the average sediment load of the river must have been 3 to 4 × 10 m3 a−1.

Sediment-flux Relations

Having derived estimates for the total removal rates we ran now discuss the various modes of sediment transport by the advancing glacier during the excavation of the trench. The sediment flux, Qt , through a cross-section of width W perpendicular to the direction of ice flow, is the sum of the flux carried within the ice, Qi , the flux due to deformation of a subglacial till layer, Qs , and the flux carried by subglacial streams, QW :

.

The debris flux in the ice is Qi = CiWhbub where u b is the average velocity of the basal ice, W is the width of the glacier, hb is the thickness of the layer of sediment-laden ice and C i is the concentration of debris given as mass per volume of ice. The sediment concentration is mainly in the basal ice, and flux in the supraglacia1 and englacial ice facies can be neglected here. Considering the eastern branch of Breiöamerkurjökull, we can esumale Q i = 105 m3 a−1, assuming a sediment concentration of 10% per volume in a basal layer of h b = 1 m, W = 4 km, and u b = 200 m a−1 (assuming plug flow of which velocity was estimated from aerial photographs).

The flux carried by the deforming subglacial till is Q s = W hsus where hs is the thickness of the deforming subglacial till layer and u s is the average speed of the till layer. This flux is roughly estimated to be of the order of 106 m3 a−1, assuming h t = 2 m, a linear velocity profile in the deforming layer (Reference AlleyAlley, 1991), and that the ice is fully coupled to and not sliding over the till.

The sediment flux in the subglacial streams is Q w= C w q w where C w is the concentration of sediments in the water and q w is the discharge of water drained along the glacier bed. This transport by fluvial processes during the excavation of the trench must have been several factors higher than the other transport processes: during the period 1732-1890 aboul 30 × 106 m3 a−1 of sediments (Table 1). The present rate of transport, however, seems to be about one-third of this; about 10 × 106 m3 a−1, of which 30% are transported by the river to the sea (q w = 130 m3 s−1, C w = 1.5 kg m−3, density 2000 kg m−3) and 70% are dumped into the lake. The accumulation of sediments in the lake over the period 1932-75 was obtained from the interpretation of lake-sediment stratigraphy by Reference Boulton, Harris and JarvisBoulton and others (1982, p. 43).

During the excavation period 1730-1890, the average sediment concentration of a river of the same discharge as Jökulsá (130 m3 s−1) would have been about 10 kg m−3. Such concentrations have heen measured in Icelandic rivers during jökulhlaups and surges (Reference BjörnssonBjörnsson, 1979). The marginal ice-dammed lakes east of the glacier drained annually. During the Little lce Age the ice dams were thicker than now, and the discharge of the jökulhlaups and their capacity to remove basal sediments would have been much larger than today. Further, several surging events took place during the advance of Breiöamerkurjökull, but this activity terminated early in the 20th century. Reduced sediment transport would also be expected now if the soft sediments have already been scoured away and the glacier is moving over hard bedrock in the deepest part of the trench. The possibility remains that depletion of soft sediments may have terminated the surge activity.

Conclusions

A 20 km long, 2-5 km wide trench, which is up to 300 m below sea level is believed to have been created by removal of sediment during the advance of Breiöamerkurjökull in the Little Ice Age, i.e. from AD 1400 lo the 1890s. During the period 1730-1890 the glacier advanced by 9 km, and a volume of 5 × 109 m3 was excavated, implying an average denudation rate of 0.7 m a−1 and a transport rate out of the trench of 32 × 106 m3 a−1. The sediment flux carried within the ice and by the deforming subglacial till may have been about 105 and 106 m3 a−1, respectively. Thus, the transport by fluvial processes during the excavation of the trench must have been an order of magnitude higher than the other transport processes together, about 30 × 106 m3 a−1 of sediment. The present rale of transport, however considerable, seems to be about 10 × 106 m3 a−1, of which 30% is transported by the river to the sea and 70% dumped into the lake. Hence, fluvial processes carrying sediment loads three times greater than at present operated during the excavation of the trench. Then the average sediment concentration of a river of the same size as Jökulsá (130 m3 s−1) would have been about 10 kg m−3. Concentrations of that magnitude have been measured only in Icelanclic rivers during jökulhlaups and surges. Such activities were frequent during the excavation of the trench beneath the eastern branch of Breiöamerkurjökull.

When glaciers are overriding layers of fine-grained sediments which are easily erodible by water, the supply and distribution of water may be the only limitation on the capacity for removal of subglacial sediments. At Breiöamerkurjökull the supply of meltwater and rain is great, and marginal lakes frequently drain in jökulhlaups.Water gets easily down to the base where it normally drains rapidly down the trench and during surges repeatedly makes contact with new basal sediments.

References

Ahlmann, H. W. 1953. Glacier variations and climatic fluctuations. New york, American Geographical Society.Google Scholar
Alley, R. B., 1991. Deforming-bed origin for southern Laurentide till sheets? J. Glaciol., 37, 67-76.Google Scholar
Bárðarson, G. G. 1934. Islands Gletscher. Beiträge zur Kenntniss der Gletscherbewegungen und Schwankungen auf Grund alter Quellenschriften und neuesten Forschung. Societas Scientiarum Islandica, 16.Google Scholar
Björnsson, H. 1979. Glaciers in Iceland. jükull. 29, 74-80.Google Scholar
Björnsson, H., Páilssun, F. and Guðmundsson, M. T. 1992. Breiöamerkurjökull. Niðurstáður ínjámælinga 1991. Reykjavík, University of Iceland. Science Institute. (RH-92-12.)Google Scholar
Bogadóttir, H., Boulton, G. S, Tómasson, H. and Thors, K. 1985. The structure of the sediments beneath Breiðamerkursandur and the form of the underlying bedrock. In Sigbjarnason, G., ed. Iceland Coastal and River Symposium. Proceedings. Reykjavík, National Energy Authority, 295-303.Google Scholar
Boulton, G. S., Harris, P. W. V. and Jarvis, J. 1982. Stratigraphy and structure of a coastal sediment wedge of glacial origin inferred from sparker measurements in glacial lake Jökulsárlón in southeastern Iceland. Jökall, 32, 37-47.Google Scholar
Boulton, G. S., Thors, K. and Jarvis., J., 1989. Dispersal of glacially derived sediment over part of the continental shelf of south Iceland and the geometry of the resultant sediment bodies. Mar. Geology, 83, 193-223.Google Scholar
Henderson, E. 1818. Iceland: or the journal of a resident in that island during the years 1814 and 1815. Vol. I. Edinburgh, Oliphant, Waugh and Innes.Google Scholar
Howarth, P. J. and Price, R. J. 1969. The proglacial lakes of Breiöamerkurjökull and Fláajökull, Iceland. Geogr. J., 135(4), 573-581.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jóannesson, H. 1994. Coastal erosion near the bridges across Jökulsá á Breiðamerkursandi in southeastern Iceland. In Viggoson, G., ed. Proceedings. International Coastal Symposium in Höfn, the town of Hornafjörður, Iceland, 20-24 June 1994. Reykjavik, The Icelandic Harbour Authority, 405-414.Google Scholar
Norðanfari., 1870. Jökulhlaup og Fleira. Norðanfari, 10 Februar 1870 (6-7), 14.Google Scholar
Nörlund, N. E. 1944. Islands kortlægning: en historisk fremstilling. Good. Inst. Publ. VII.Google Scholar
Páasson, S. 1883. Puysisk, geogralisk og historisk beskrivelse af de islandske Isbjerge (1791-1794). Norsk Turistforenings Årbok 1882-1883, 1-63.Google Scholar
Pálsson, S. (1791-1797.) 1945. Jöklaritjð. In Ferðabök Sveins Pálssonar. Dagbækur og ritgerðir 1791-1797. Reykjavík, Snælandsútgáfan, 423-552.Google Scholar
Price, R. J. 1969. Moraines, sandar, kames and eskers near Breiðamerkurjökull, Ierland, Inst. Br. Geogr. Trans. 46, 17-43.Google Scholar
Price, R. J. 1971. The development and destruction of a sandur, Brciðamerkurjokull, Iceland. Arct. Alp. Res., 3(3), 225-237.Google Scholar
Price, R. J. 1982. Changes in the proglacial area of Breiðamerkurjökull, southern Iceland: 1890-1980. Jökull, 32, 29-35.Google Scholar
Rist, S. 1957. Íslensk völn. Reykjavík, Raforkumálastjóri.Google Scholar
Sigbjarnason, G. 1970. On the refession of Vatnajökull. Jökull, 20, 50-61.Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, H. 1978. Kortasaga Íslands frá lokum 16. aldar til 1848. Reykjavik, Bókaútgáfa Menningarsjóðs og pjóðvinafélagsins.Google Scholar
Thienemann, F. A. L. 1824. Reise im Norden Europas, vorzuglich in Island in den Jahren 1820 bis 1821. Leipzig, Carl Heinrich Reclam.Google Scholar
Thorarinsson, S. 1943. Vatnajökull; scientific results of the Swedish-Icelandic investigations 1936-37-38. Chapter 11. Oscillations of the Icelandic glaciers in the last 250 years. Geogr. Annal., 25, 1-54.Google Scholar
Thorarinsson, S. 1974. Sambú lands og lðs í ellefu aldir. In Lindal, S., ed. Saga Íslands I. Reykjavik, Hið Íslenska Bókmetuafélag, 29-97.Google Scholar
Thoroddsen, T. 1892. Islands jökler i fortid og nutid. Geogr. Tidsskr., 11(5-6), 111-146.Google Scholar
Thoroddsen, T. 1905/06. Island Grundriss der Geographie und Geologie. Mitteilungen aus Justus Perthes’ Geographischer Anstalt, 32(152/153), 1-161/162-358.Google Scholar
Tómasson, H. and Vilmundardóttir., E, 1967. The lakes Stórisjór and Langisjór. Jókull, 17. 280-299.Google Scholar
Víkingsson, S. 1991. Suðurströnd Íslands, breytingar á legu standar samkvæmt kortum og loftmyndum. Reykjavík, Orkustofnun. (Report OS-91042/VOD-07B.)Google Scholar
Watts, L.W., 1876. Across the valnajöhull; or scenes in Iceland, being a description of hitherto unknown regions. London, Longmans and Co.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Breiðamerkurjökull and surroundings. The outlet is divided into three branches by two medial moraines. Contour heights are given in metres above sea level.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. The bedrock topography of Breiöamerkurjökull, surveyed by radio-echo soundings (Björnsson and others, 1992). Contains in metres.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Perspective Plots of the sub-ice topography of Breiöamerkurjökull. View towards the north. Vertical exaggeration ten times horizontal.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Changen in the Position of the front of Breiöamerkurjökull at the Jökulsá river (with reference to the position in 1735).

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Changes in the position of the coastline at Breiðamerkursendur according to maps of 1817 (the same as on Gunnlaugsson map of 1834; see Sigurðsson, 1978), 1904 (Danish Geodetic Survey) and 1989 (Icelandic Geodetic Survey ).

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Schematic sections along a central flowline of the eastern brunch of Breiöamerkurjökull at particular times between 1730 and 1990.

Figure 6

Table 1. Estimated maximum rates of sediment transport from the eastern branch of Breiöamerkurjökull