Dynamics of crustal rifting in NE Iceland
- 10 October 1985
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 90 (B12) , 10151-10162
- https://doi.org/10.1029/jb090ib12p10151
Abstract
Magnetotelluric measurements have revealed a crustal thickness of 8–10 km in the axial rift zone of NE Iceland and above the proposed hot spot in central east and north Iceland. The crust thickens with age and is 20–30 km thick in the older Tertiary areas to the east and west of the axial rift zone. It also thickens toward north with increasing distance from the hot spot. The crust is underlain by a diapiric updoming asthenosphere over large parts of the country. At the crust asthenosphere interface there is a partially molten basaltic layer a few kilometers thick. This layer partially decouples the crust from the anomalous mantle. Its low viscosity may explain the spatial and temporal instability of the rift axis and the high mobility of the crust during technically active periods. A major volcano‐tectonic rifting episode started in the Krafla area in 1975 involving an 80‐km‐long segment of the plate boundary. Several meters of opening accompanied by subsidence was observed in the center of the axial fissure swarm and contraction and uplift occurred on the sides. The rifting occurred in several short events. Magma flowed horizontally from an upper crustal magma chamber and mixed with magma ascending directly from the semifluid layer at the base of the crust. Crustal accretion was mainly engineered by dike intrusions. Only a minor part of the magma transported reached the surface. During technically quiet epochs, plate‐driving forces, caused by the upwelling asthenosphere, result in long‐term stretching and accumulation of tensile stress in the thinnest part of the crust. The vertical and horizontal displacements during rifting episodes can be explained by elastic rebound, where fissure opening accompanied by magma flow causes the release of tension.This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Form and dimensions of dykes in eastern IcelandTectonophysics, 1983
- Crustal genesis in Iceland: Geophysical constraints on crustal thickening with ageGeophysical Research Letters, 1981
- Crustal rifting, and related thermo-mechanical processes in the lithosphere beneath IcelandInternational Journal of Earth Sciences, 1981
- Seismic activity associated with the September 1977 deflation of the Krafla central volcano in northeastern IcelandJournal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 1979
- Plate boundary within Tjörnes Fracture Zone on northern Iceland's insular marginNature, 1977
- Evolution of the Norwegian-Greenland SeaGSA Bulletin, 1977
- Evolution of the Axial Rifting Zone in Northern Iceland and the Tjörnes Fracture ZoneGSA Bulletin, 1974
- A Discussion on the measurement and interpretation of changes of strain in the Earth - Global measurements of absolute stressPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1973
- Iceland Mantle Plume: Geochemical Study of Reykjanes RidgeNature, 1973
- Chemistry and distribution pattern of recent basaltic rocks in IcelandLithos, 1972