Lost world - Late Quaternary environment of periglacial Arctic shelves and coastal lowlands in NE-Siberia.

About 1.6 million square kilometres of subaerial shelf land existed between the modern coast and the sea level lowstand in the region of the modern Laptev, East Siberian and Chuchki Seas during the Last Glacial Maximum. We consider this Great Arctic Plain (GAP) as the northern part of the Late Pleis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schirrmeister, Lutz, Hubberten, Hans-Wolfgang, Rachold, Volker, Grosse, Guido
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/16593/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.26457
Description
Summary:About 1.6 million square kilometres of subaerial shelf land existed between the modern coast and the sea level lowstand in the region of the modern Laptev, East Siberian and Chuchki Seas during the Last Glacial Maximum. We consider this Great Arctic Plain (GAP) as the northern part of the Late Pleistocene Beringia between Siberia and Alaska. Permafrost is the main feature that characterized this landscape. This shelf landscape was neither glaciated during the Late Pleistocene nor throughout the Late Saalian glacial periods. Most parts of the extensive area were flooded in a relatively short time span of 7 ky during the Early-Middle Holocene. How was this lost world originally characterized and how did it react on the Late Quaternary climate variations? Some answers were found in permafrost sequences on the coastal plains around the Laptev Sea, which represent the frozen remnants of the GAP. Since 1998 joint Russian-German expeditions studied ice-rich permafrost deposits exposed in numerous bluffs along the coast as well as on the New Siberian Archipelago. A variety of palaeoenvironmental records are well preserved there in frozen state. The oldest absolute dated permafrost records go back as far as the Saalian Glacial 200,000 years ago. Russian scientists identified ice wedge casts already in Pliocene deposits 2.5 million years old. Permafrost aggraded especially during glacial periods and was partly degraded during interglacials. Large Siberian rivers e.g. Khatanga, Olenyek, Lena, Yana, Indigirka and Kolyma flowed across the gently inclined, extensive accumulation plain on the subaerial shelves. The Great Arctic Plain was covered by steppe-like vegetation serving as food for numerous herds of mammals from the so-called Mammoth Fauna. Mountain ranges of some 100 m height existed on the New Siberian Islands and the mainland bordering the GAP in the south. These mountains were the main sediment source for the formation of ice-rich permafrost deposits. Although permafrost occurs approximately 300-500 m down below ...