EGU21-15752
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15752
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Geomorphology, hydrology, and chronology of Early Holocene jökulhlaups along the Hvítá River and Gullfoss waterfall, Iceland

Greta Wells1,2, Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach1, Timothy Beach1, Thorsteinn Saemundsson2, and Andrew Dugmore3
Greta Wells et al.
  • 1Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA (ghwells@utexas.edu)
  • 2Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland
  • 3School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

Glacial outburst floods (jökulhlaups) have occurred across Earth throughout the Quaternary, often leaving a geomorphologic, sedimentological, and climatic legacy that extends far beyond the source region and can persist for millennia. Furthermore, they pose an increasing geohazard in glaciated landscapes worldwide due to climate-driven ice retreat. Iceland experiences more frequent jökulhlaups than nearly anywhere on Earth, though most research focuses on floods triggered by subglacial volcanic and geothermal activity. However, abundant evidence also exists for non-volcanogenic floods from proglacial lakes, which may serve as a better analogue for most global jökulhlaups.

As the Icelandic Ice Sheet retreated across Iceland in the Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene, meltwater lakes formed at ice margins and periodically drained in jökulhlaups. Some of the most catastrophic floods drained from ice-dammed Glacial Lake Kjölur, surging across southwestern Iceland from the interior highlands to the Atlantic Ocean. These floods left extensive geomorphologic evidence along the modern-day course of the Hvítá River, including canyon systems, scoured bedrock, boulder deposits, and Gullfoss—Iceland’s most famous waterfall. The largest events reached an estimated peak discharge on the order of 105 m3 s-1, ranking them among the largest known floods in Iceland and on Earth. Yet, all our evidence for the Kjölur jökulhlaups comes from only one publication from a quarter-century ago.

This project employs a combination of field, modelling, and laboratory methods to better constrain flood timing and dynamics at this underexplored site. This talk synthesizes geomorphologic field mapping, HEC-RAS hydraulic simulations and paleohydraulic calculations, and cosmogenic nuclide exposure dates to reconstruct Kjölur jökulhlaup routing, hydrology, and chronology. It situates these events within the context of Pleistocene-Holocene Icelandic Ice Sheet retreat and paleoenvironmental change, presenting a series of scenarios of ice margin position, glacial lake extent, and jökulhlaup drainage. Finally, it assesses the Kjölur jökulhlaups as an analogue to contemporary glacial outburst floods in other Arctic and alpine regions in terms of flood frequency, dynamics, and landscape impact.

How to cite: Wells, G., Luzzadder-Beach, S., Beach, T., Saemundsson, T., and Dugmore, A.: Geomorphology, hydrology, and chronology of Early Holocene jökulhlaups along the Hvítá River and Gullfoss waterfall, Iceland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15752, 2021.