'Skjaldbreiður', meaning the ''broad shield'' in
Icelandic, is an
Icelandic mountain from whose name the term "
shield volcano" derives. It was formed in a huge and protracted eruption roughly 9,000 years ago. The extensive
lava fields which were produced by this eruption, flowed southwards, and formed the basin of
Þingvallavatn, Iceland's largest lake, and
Þingvellir, the "Parliament Plains" where the Icelandic national assembly, the
Alþing was founded in the year
930.
The volcano culminates at 1,060
metres, and its
crater measures roughly 300
metres in diameter.
Straddling the
Mid-Atlantic ridge, the lava fields from Skjaldbreiður have been torn and twisted over the millennia, forming a multitude of fissures and rifts inside the
Þingvellir National Park, the best known of which are
Almannagjá,
Hrafnagjá and
Flosagjá.
References
★
Volcanoes of Europe, , Alwyn, Scarth, Oxford University Press, ,
★
Iceland (Classic Geology in Europe 3), , Thor, Thordarson, Terra Publishing, ,