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  3. Late Weichselian local ice dome configuration and chronology in Northwestern Svalbard: early thinning, late retreat
 

Late Weichselian local ice dome configuration and chronology in Northwestern Svalbard: early thinning, late retreat

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.46966
Date of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Geologie...

Author
Gjermundsen, Endre F.
Briner, Jason P.
Akçar, Nakiorcid-logo
Institut für Geologie
Salvigsen, Otto
Kubik, Peter
Gantert, Niklas
Hormes, Anne
Subject(s)

500 - Science::550 - ...

Series
Quaternary Science Reviews
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0277-3791
Publisher
Pergamon
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.04.006
Uncontrolled Keywords

Quaternary

Glacial geology

Cosmogenic exposure d...

10Be dating

Erratic boulders

Late Weichselian

Svalbard

Spitsbergen

Northwest Spitsbergen...

The High Arctic

Svalbard Barents Sea ...

Description
The chronology and configuration of the Svalbard Barents Sea Ice Sheet (SBSIS) during the Late Weichselian (LW) are based on few and geographically scattered data. Thus, the timing and configuration of the SBSIS has been a subject of extensive debate. We present provenance data of erratic boulders and cosmogenic 10Be ages of bedrock and boulders from Northwest Spitsbergen (NWS), Svalbard to determine the thickness, configuration and chronology during the LW. We sampled bedrock and boulders of mountain summits and summit slopes, along with erratic boulders from coastal locations around NWS. We suggest that a local ice dome over central NWS during LW drained radially in all directions. Provenance data from erratic boulders from northern coastal lowland Reinsdyrflya suggest northeastward ice flow through Liefdefjorden. 10Be ages of high-elevation erratic boulders in central NWS (687–836 m above sea level) ranging from 18.3 ± 1.3 ka to 21.7 ± 1.4 ka, indicate that the centre of a local ice dome was at least 300 m thicker than at present. 10Be ages of all high-elevation erratics (>400 m above sea level, central and coastal locations) indicate the onset of ice dome thinning at 25–20 ka. 10Be ages from erratic boulders on Reinsdyrflya ranging from 11.1 ± 0.8 ka to 21.4 ± 1.7 ka, indicate an ice cover over the entire Reinsdyrflya during LW and a complete deglaciation prior to the Holocene, but apparently later than the thinning in the mountains. Lack of moraine deposits, but the preservation of beach terraces, suggest that the ice covering this peninsula possibly was cold-based and that Reinsdyrflya was part of an inter ice-stream area covered by slow-flowing ice, as opposed to the adjacent fjord, which possibly was filled by a fast-flowing ice stream. Despite the early thinning of the ice sheet (25–20 ka) we find a later timing of deglaciation of the fjords and the distal lowlands. Several bedrock samples (10Be) from vertical transects in the central mountains of NWS pre-date the LW, and suggest either ice free or pervasive cold-based ice conditions. Our reconstruction is aligned with the previously suggested hypothesis that a complex multi-dome ice-sheet-configuration occupied Svalbard and the Barents Sea during LW, with numerous drainage basins feeding fast ice streams, separated by slow flowing, possibly cold-based, inter ice-stream areas.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/118196
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akçar_gjermundsen.pdftextAdobe PDF9.48 MBpublisherpublished restricted
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