Hverfjall
Maps
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Mývatn with Hverfjall to the east
Aerial pictures of Hverfjall
[edit]Views of Hverfjall
[edit]The crater
[edit]The surroundings of Hverfjall
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View in direction of Krafla caldera, Hlíðarfjall, Jarðbaðshólar with Jarðböðin, Námafjall and another much smaller tuff ring nearby
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Walking down the flank of Hverfjall
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Seen from the remnants of a lava lake, Dimmuborgir
Origins of tuff rings
[edit]Maar diatreme and tuff ring origin (Kereszturi, Gábor and Németh, Károly, 2012)
[edit]Schematic cross-section through a maar-diatreme (upper diagram) and a tuff ring (lower diagram), showing the typical volcano-sedimentary processes, deposits and geomorphological features. Note that the left-hand side represents the characteristics of a maar-diatreme volcano formed in a hard-substrate environment, while the right-hand side is a soft rock environment. (Abbreviation: PDC = pyroclastic density current).
Origin of Hverfjall
[edit]In this case the phreatomagmatic and explosive eruptions which had commenced on an eruption fissure, were very intensive due to an important reservoir of groundwater which the magma encountered on its way, so that copious amounts of ash and debris were produced and formed the wide ring wall of the tuff ring, closed the vent, and the water evaporated. Today, there is no surface access to the groundwater table which makes the difference to maars like the Víti crater in the same volcanic system.
1: Water vapour cloud | |
2: Volcanic bomb | |
3: Magma conduit | |
4: Layers of magma and ash | |
5: Stratum | |
6: Water table | |
7: Explosion | |
8: Magma chamber |