Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden

Large-scale drumlins occur abundantly throughout central and northern Sweden. Whereas many drumlins in the north are an integral part of a relict glacial landscape > 100,000 years old, those to the south are generally interpreted as of last deglaciation age. Typically, the latter ones have not be...

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Main Authors: Hattestrand, Clas, Gotz, Svea, Naslund, Jens-Ove, Fabel, Frederick, Stroeven, Arjen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1885/80304
id ftanucanberra:oai:digitalcollections.anu.edu.au:1885/80304
record_format openpolar
spelling ftanucanberra:oai:digitalcollections.anu.edu.au:1885/80304 2023-05-15T16:41:16+02:00 Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden Hattestrand, Clas Gotz, Svea Naslund, Jens-Ove Fabel, Frederick Stroeven, Arjen 2015-12-13T22:48:57Z http://hdl.handle.net/1885/80304 unknown Blackwell Publishing Ltd 0435-3676 http://hdl.handle.net/1885/80304 Geografiska Annaler Keywords: drumlin glacial landform last deglaciation numerical model Quaternary Eurasia Europe Northern Europe Scandinavia Sweden Drumlins Ice sheet Sweden Journal article 2015 ftanucanberra 2015-12-21T23:52:36Z Large-scale drumlins occur abundantly throughout central and northern Sweden. Whereas many drumlins in the north are an integral part of a relict glacial landscape > 100,000 years old, those to the south are generally interpreted as of last deglaciation age. Typically, the latter ones have not been overprinted by younger glacial landforms. Despite this apparent difference in formation history, drumlins in both regions have similar directional and morphological characteristics. A systematic analysis of >3000 drumlins in (i) areas within relief landscapes, (ii) areas with an ambiguous deglaciation age assignment, and (iii) areas within deglacial landscapes, indicates that these latter deglaciation drumlins differ clearly in both shape and size from drumlins in the other two types of landscapes. In addition, numerical modelling indicates that basal melting conditions, a prerequisite for drumlin formation, prevailed only for a very limited time over much of northern Sweden during the last deglaciation, but lasted for longer periods of time during earlier stages of the Weichselian. A reconnaissance radionuclide bedrock exposure date from the crag of a large drumlin in the relict landscape indicates that glacial erosion, and presumably drumlin formation, at this location predated Marine Isotope Stage 7. We conclude, therefore, that the large-scale drumlins of central and northern Sweden did not form during the last deglaciation, or during any other specific ice flow event. Instead, we suggest that they were formed by successive phases of erosion and deposition by ice sheets of similar magnitude and configuration. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ice Sheet Northern Sweden Australian National University: ANU Digital Collections
institution Open Polar
collection Australian National University: ANU Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftanucanberra
language unknown
topic Keywords: drumlin
glacial landform
last deglaciation
numerical model
Quaternary
Eurasia
Europe
Northern Europe
Scandinavia
Sweden Drumlins
Ice sheet
Sweden
spellingShingle Keywords: drumlin
glacial landform
last deglaciation
numerical model
Quaternary
Eurasia
Europe
Northern Europe
Scandinavia
Sweden Drumlins
Ice sheet
Sweden
Hattestrand, Clas
Gotz, Svea
Naslund, Jens-Ove
Fabel, Frederick
Stroeven, Arjen
Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden
topic_facet Keywords: drumlin
glacial landform
last deglaciation
numerical model
Quaternary
Eurasia
Europe
Northern Europe
Scandinavia
Sweden Drumlins
Ice sheet
Sweden
description Large-scale drumlins occur abundantly throughout central and northern Sweden. Whereas many drumlins in the north are an integral part of a relict glacial landscape > 100,000 years old, those to the south are generally interpreted as of last deglaciation age. Typically, the latter ones have not been overprinted by younger glacial landforms. Despite this apparent difference in formation history, drumlins in both regions have similar directional and morphological characteristics. A systematic analysis of >3000 drumlins in (i) areas within relief landscapes, (ii) areas with an ambiguous deglaciation age assignment, and (iii) areas within deglacial landscapes, indicates that these latter deglaciation drumlins differ clearly in both shape and size from drumlins in the other two types of landscapes. In addition, numerical modelling indicates that basal melting conditions, a prerequisite for drumlin formation, prevailed only for a very limited time over much of northern Sweden during the last deglaciation, but lasted for longer periods of time during earlier stages of the Weichselian. A reconnaissance radionuclide bedrock exposure date from the crag of a large drumlin in the relict landscape indicates that glacial erosion, and presumably drumlin formation, at this location predated Marine Isotope Stage 7. We conclude, therefore, that the large-scale drumlins of central and northern Sweden did not form during the last deglaciation, or during any other specific ice flow event. Instead, we suggest that they were formed by successive phases of erosion and deposition by ice sheets of similar magnitude and configuration.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hattestrand, Clas
Gotz, Svea
Naslund, Jens-Ove
Fabel, Frederick
Stroeven, Arjen
author_facet Hattestrand, Clas
Gotz, Svea
Naslund, Jens-Ove
Fabel, Frederick
Stroeven, Arjen
author_sort Hattestrand, Clas
title Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden
title_short Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden
title_full Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden
title_fullStr Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Drumlin Formation Time: Evidence from Nothern and Central Sweden
title_sort drumlin formation time: evidence from nothern and central sweden
publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1885/80304
genre Ice Sheet
Northern Sweden
genre_facet Ice Sheet
Northern Sweden
op_source Geografiska Annaler
op_relation 0435-3676
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/80304
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