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Eurasian ice-sheet interaction in northwestern Russia throughout the late Quaternary
Authors:KURT H KJæR  EILIV LARSEN  SVEND FUNDER  IGOR N DEMIDOV  MARIA JENSEN  LENA HAKANSSON  REW MURRAY
Institution:(e-mail: ), Natural History Museum of Denmark, Geological Museum, University of Copenhagen, Øster Voldgade 5–7, DK-1350 Copenhagen K Denmark;Geological Survey of Norway, NO-7491 Trondheim, Norway;Geological Museum, University of Copenhagen, Øster Voldgade 5–7, DK-1350 Copenhagen K Denmark;Russian Academy of Sciences, Karelian Research Centre, Institute of Geology, 11 Pushkinskaya Street, Petrozavodsk, 185610 Russia;GeoBiosphere Science Centre, Quaternary Sciences, Lund University, Sölvegatan 13, SE-223 62 Lund, Sweden;Nordic Laboratory for Luminescence Dating, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Aarhus, RisøNational Laboratory, DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark
Abstract:Sediment successions from the Kanin Peninsula and Chyoshskaya Bay in northwestern Russia contain information on the marginal behaviour of all major ice sheets centred in Scandinavia, the Barents Sea and the Kara Sea during the Eemian-Weichselian. Extensive luminescence dating of regional lithostratigraphical units, supported by biostratigraphical evidence, identifies four major ice advances at 100-90, 70-65, 55-45 and 20-18 kyr ago interbedded with lacustrine, glaciolacustrine and marine sediments. The widespread occurrence of marine tidal sediments deposited c. 65-60 kyr ago allows a stratigraphical division of the Middle Weichselian Barents Sea and Kara Sea ice sheets into two shelf-based glaciations separated by almost complete deglaciation. The first ice dispersal centre was in the Barents Sea and thereafter in the Kara Sea. It is possible to extract both flow patterns from ice marginal landforms inside the southward termination. Accordingly, it is proposed that the Markhida line and its western continuation are asynchronous and originate from two separate glaciations before and after the marine transgression. The marine sedimentation occurred during a eustatic sea-level rise of up to 20 m/1000 yr, i.e. the Mezen Transgression. We speculate that the rapid eustatic sea-level rise triggered a collapse of the Barents Sea Ice Sheet at the MIS (Marine Isotope Stage) 4 to 3 transition. This is motivated by lack of an early marine highstand, the timing of events, and the marginal position of Arkhangelsk relative to open marine conditions.
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