Dowdeswell, Julian A. et al. (2010): High-resolution geophysical observations of the Yermak Plateau and northern Svalbard margin; implications for ice sheet grounding and deep-keeled icebergs

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 151
ODP 154
ODP 151 910
ODP 154 928
Identifier:
2012-053027
georefid

10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.06.002
doi

Creator:
Dowdeswell, Julian A.
University of Cambridge, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom
author

Jakobsson, Martin
Stockholm University, Sweden
author

Hogan, Kelly A.
Loughborough University, United Kingdom
author

O'Regan, Matthew
Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, Denmark
author

Backman, Jan
University Centre in Svalbard, Norway
author

Evans, Jeffrey
Durham University, United Kingdom
author

Hell, Benjamin
Royal Danish Administration of Navigation and Hydrography, Denmark
author

Loewemark, Ludvig
author

Marcussen, Christian
author

Noormets, Rike
author

O Cofaigh, C.
author

Sellen, Emma
author

Solvsten, M.
author

Identification:
High-resolution geophysical observations of the Yermak Plateau and northern Svalbard margin; implications for ice sheet grounding and deep-keeled icebergs
2010
In: Jakobsson, Martin (editor), Ingolfsson, Olafur (editor), Kjaer, Kurt H. (editor), Long, Antony (editor), Spielhagen, Robert F. (editor), APEX; Arctic Palaeoclimate and its EXtremes
Elsevier, International
29
25-26
3518-3531
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.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:82.4000
West:-12.4155East: 12.3000
South:69.1455

Quaternary geology; Applied geophysics; acoustical methods; algae; Arctic Ocean; Arctic region; Atlantic Ocean; basin analysis; basins; bathymetry; biostratigraphy; bottom features; C-13/C-12; carbon; Ceara Rise; Cenozoic; depositional environment; Equatorial Atlantic; geochemistry; geomorphology; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; glacial features; glacial geology; hemipelagic environment; ice sheets; icebergs; isotope ratios; isotopes; landforms; Leg 151; Leg 154; marine environment; marine methods; marine sedimentation; marine sediments; microfossils; nannofossils; North Atlantic; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; ODP Site 910; ODP Site 928; oxygen; paleoenvironment; Plantae; Pleistocene; Quaternary; sedimentation; sediments; stable isotopes; surveys; Svalbard; Yermak Plateau;

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