Eiríksjökull (Icelandic for "Eirík's glacier", Icelandic pronunciation:[ˈeiːriksˌjœːkʏtl̥]ⓘ) is a glacier north-west of Langjökull in Iceland, with an area of 22 km2 (8.5 sq mi) reaching a height of 1,675 m (5,495 ft),[5] atop the largest table mountain in Iceland which goes by the same name.[6]
There is an accessible ice-cored moraine beyond the north-east tuya plateau edge Klofajökull outlet glacier, but the other outlet glaciers are less accessible.[1] These are the Brækureystri to the north, Vestri-Brækur to the north-west, Þorvaldsjökull to the east and Ögmundarjökull (this is just south of the Þorvaldsjökull glacier and has been regarded as part of Þorvaldsjökull)[1] In 2008 the ice field edge was at about the 1,300 m (4,300 ft) contour.[1]
Etymology
The glacier was called Baldjökull until about 1700 and with relative certainty the current name is influenced by the nearby mountain Eiríksgnípa. Nothing is known with certainty about said Erik but a fable tells of an outlaw named Eiríkur or Eirekur who evaded capture by running into that mountain.[9]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eiríksjökull.
^ abcThordurson, Thor; Hoskuldsson, Armann (2002). Classic Geology in Europe 3: Iceland. Harpenden, England: Terra Publishing. p. 161. ISBN1-903544-06-8.