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Paleoclimate records show that Iceland was at times fully covered during Pleistocene glaciations. Models and data for the last glacial maximum indicate that the ice sheet at this time extended several tens of kilometers beyond the present coast. In contrast, much is known about the extent of the ice sheet during other times of the Weichselian glaciation, and very little information exists on possible variations of earlier glaciations. The regions near risvatn, Jkulheimar, and Blfjll in the south-central highland of Iceland contain many outcrops of Pleistocene pillow lavas. The volatile contents in the glassy rims of pillow lavas may record the ambient pressure during eruption. This could offer insight into syn-eruptive glacier thickness. 15 samples were collected from three sample locations near risvatn, one near Jkulheimar, and four near Blfjll from August 14 to August 15, 2023. Samples were crushed and sieved into 0. 5-2. 0 mm grains, and the glassiest grains were double polished with thicknesses between 88219 m for FTIR analysis. The spectra showed strong similarity to FTIR spectra of Holuhraun samples of similar thickness. H2O contents of the samples varied between 0. 220. 32 wt%, with a median of 0. 30 wt%. CO2 was under the detection limit of the FTIR analyses. This may be an artifact of polishing grains too thin, and thus separate analyses with thicker grains will be carried out to accurately assess ambient pressure due to pressure model sensitivity to CO2. Further analysis will include S concentrations, which will be used alongside H2O and CO2 to calculate a precise ambient pressure with the SulfurX model (Ding et al. , 2023). The derived parameters will be used to estimate glacier thickness.
Collins et al. (Mon,) studied this question.