Abstract

We use new remote sensing data, historical reports, petrology and estimates of viscosity based on geochemical data to illuminate the lava emplacement flow-lines and vent structure changes of the summit ridge of Hekla during the large eruptions of 1845–46 and 1766–68. Based on the planimetric method we estimate the bulk volumes of these eruptions close to 0.4 km³ and 0.7 km³, respectively. However, comparison with volume estimates from the well-recorded 1947–48 eruption, indicates that the planimetric method appears to underestimate the lava bulk volumes by 40–60\%. Hence, the true bulk volumes are more likely 0.5–0.6 km³ and 1.0–1.2 km³, respectively. Estimated melt viscosity averages for the 1766–68 eruption amount to 2.5×10² Pa s (pre-eruptive) and 2.5×10³ Pa s (degassed), and for the 1845–46 eruption 2.2×10² Pa s (pre-eruptive) and 1.9×10³ Pa s (degassed). Pre-eruptive magmas are about one order of magnitude more fluid than degassed magmas. In the 1845–46 and 1947–48 eruptions, SiO$_2$ decreased from 58–57 to 55–54 wt\% agreeing with a conventional model that Hekla erupts from a large, layered magma chamber with the most evolved (silicarich) magmas at the top. In contrast, the lava-flows from 1766–68 reveal a more complicated SiO$_2$ trend. The lava fields emplaced in 1766 to the south have SiO$_2$ values 54.9–56.5\%, while the Hringlandahraun lava-flow that erupted from younger vents on the NE end of the Hekla ridge in March 1767 has higher SiO2 of 57.8\%. This shows that the layered magma chamber model is not suitable for all lava-flows emplaced during Hekla eruptions.

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