Detailed geological and magnetic mapping in an area of Pliocene and Plio-Pleistocene volcanic rocks in Southwestern Iceland has enabled us to correlate a 2,100-m-thick lava succession with similar dated sequences in Iceland and with the ocean-floor geomagnetic polarity time scale. This correlation, supported by additional K-Ar dating, implies (1) that the succession is between 4.2 and 1.8 Ma in age, (2) that at least 13 glaciations occurred in Western and Southwestern Iceland between 3.1 and 1.8 Ma ago, and (3) that at least two geomagnetic events are present in the Lower Matuyama epoch. Paleomagnetic results from 353 igneous units, mostly basalt lavas, are tabulated. Analysis of directions from 258 of these shows them to possess some seria...
Summary. During the Late Tertiary well over 1000 lavas were extruded in Eastern Iceland; potentially...
An up-to-date appraisal of 291 late Tertiary and Quaternary palaeo-magnetic pole positions shows tha...
The HuÌsaviÌk-Flatey Fault is a 110°-striking oceanic transform fault exposed on land in northern Ic...
Potassium-argon dates are reported on five basalt samples from the Pliocene-Pleistocene sequence of ...
This paper describes a palaeomagnetic investigation of 107 igneous bodies, mostly basaltic lavas, of...
As the subaerial continuation of the Mid-Atlantic ridge, Iceland’s basaltic lavas preserve Earth’s m...
The impact of Holocene eruptive events from hot spots like Iceland may have had significant global i...
The impact of Holocene eruptive events from hot spots like Iceland may have had significant global i...
The direction and intensity of primary remanence has been measured in oriented specimens from 367 la...
We report a paleomagnetic study of Icelandic lavas of late Miocene to late Pliocene age to test the ...
Recent paleomagnetic results of extrusive rocks from high southern latitudes (> 60°S) and high no...
Recent paleomagnetic results of extrusive rocks from high southern latitudes (>60°S) and high northe...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein).The extensive lava piles of Iceland contain a unique record of g...
Copyright 1977; Oxford University PressA total of 362 successive lava flows, which were extruded at ...
Paleomagnetic data can be used to determine the orientation of Earth’s magnetic field in the past. T...
Summary. During the Late Tertiary well over 1000 lavas were extruded in Eastern Iceland; potentially...
An up-to-date appraisal of 291 late Tertiary and Quaternary palaeo-magnetic pole positions shows tha...
The HuÌsaviÌk-Flatey Fault is a 110°-striking oceanic transform fault exposed on land in northern Ic...
Potassium-argon dates are reported on five basalt samples from the Pliocene-Pleistocene sequence of ...
This paper describes a palaeomagnetic investigation of 107 igneous bodies, mostly basaltic lavas, of...
As the subaerial continuation of the Mid-Atlantic ridge, Iceland’s basaltic lavas preserve Earth’s m...
The impact of Holocene eruptive events from hot spots like Iceland may have had significant global i...
The impact of Holocene eruptive events from hot spots like Iceland may have had significant global i...
The direction and intensity of primary remanence has been measured in oriented specimens from 367 la...
We report a paleomagnetic study of Icelandic lavas of late Miocene to late Pliocene age to test the ...
Recent paleomagnetic results of extrusive rocks from high southern latitudes (> 60°S) and high no...
Recent paleomagnetic results of extrusive rocks from high southern latitudes (>60°S) and high northe...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein).The extensive lava piles of Iceland contain a unique record of g...
Copyright 1977; Oxford University PressA total of 362 successive lava flows, which were extruded at ...
Paleomagnetic data can be used to determine the orientation of Earth’s magnetic field in the past. T...
Summary. During the Late Tertiary well over 1000 lavas were extruded in Eastern Iceland; potentially...
An up-to-date appraisal of 291 late Tertiary and Quaternary palaeo-magnetic pole positions shows tha...
The HuÌsaviÌk-Flatey Fault is a 110°-striking oceanic transform fault exposed on land in northern Ic...