Dowdeswell, Julian A.; Jakobsson, Martin; Hogan, Kelly A.; O'Regan, Matthew; Backman, Jan; Evans, Jeffrey; Hell, Benjamin; Loewemark, Ludvig; Marcussen, Christian; Noormets, Rike; O Cofaigh, C.; Sellen, Emma; Solvsten, M. (2010): High-resolution geophysical observations of the Yermak Plateau and northern Svalbard margin; implications for ice sheet grounding and deep-keeled icebergs. Elsevier, International, In: Jakobsson, Martin (editor), Ingolfsson, Olafur (editor), Kjaer, Kurt H. (editor), Long, Antony (editor), Spielhagen, Robert F. (editor), APEX; Arctic Palaeoclimate and its EXtremes, 29 (25-26), 3518-3531, georefid:2012-053027

Abstract:
High-resolution geophysical evidence on the seafloor morphology and acoustic stratigraphy of the Yermak Plateau and northern Svalbard margin between 79 degrees 20' and 81 degrees 30'N and 5 degrees and 22 degrees E is presented. Geophysical datasets are derived from swath bathymetry and sub-bottom acoustic profiling and are combined with existing cores to derive chronological control. Seafloor landforms, in the form of ice-produced lineations, iceberg ploughmarks of various dimensions (including features over 80 m deep and down to about 1000 m), and a moat indicating strong currents are found. The shallow stratigraphy of the Yermak Plateau shows three acoustic units: the first with well-developed stratification produced by hemipelagic sedimentation, often draped over a strong and undulating internal reflector; a second with an undulating upper surface and little acoustic penetration, indicative of the action of ice; a third unit of an acoustically transparent facies, resulting from debris flows. Core chronology suggests a MIS 6 age for the undulating seafloor above about 580 m. There are several possible explanations, including: (a) the flow of a major grounded ice sheet across the plateau crest from Svalbard (least likely given the consolidation state of the underlying sediments); (b) the more transient encroachment of relatively thin ice from Svalbard; or (c) the drift across the plateau of an ice-shelf remnant or megaberg from the Arctic Basin. The latter is our favoured explanation given the evidence currently at our disposal. Abstract Copyright (2010) Elsevier, B.V.
Coverage:
West: -12.4155 East: 12.3000 North: 82.4000 South: 69.1455
West: NaN East: NaN North: NaN South: NaN
Relations:
Expedition: 151
Site: 151-910
Expedition: 154
Site: 154-928
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.06.002 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
This metadata in ISO19139 XML format