www.elsevier.comrlocatergloplacha The extent of the Late Weichselian ice sheet in the southeastern

We have compiled a large number of seismic records and descriptions of sediment cores obtained from the southeastern Ž. Ž.Barents Sea Pechora Sea by former Soviet Union institutions. Five major seismostratigraphic units SSU-I–V were Ž.recognized. The oldest till SSU-V is mainly confined to the south...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barents Sea, Valery Gataullin A, Jan Mangerud B, John Inge Svendsen C
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.469.9889
http://folk.uib.no/ngljm/PDF_files/Gataullin-et-al-01.pdf
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Summary:We have compiled a large number of seismic records and descriptions of sediment cores obtained from the southeastern Ž. Ž.Barents Sea Pechora Sea by former Soviet Union institutions. Five major seismostratigraphic units SSU-I–V were Ž.recognized. The oldest till SSU-V is mainly confined to the southernmost area and is covered by a 100–150-m-thick wedge Ž.of Middle Weichselian marine sediments SSU-IV distal to the mouth of the Pechora River. Three Late Weichselian ice sheet margins are identified on the Pechora Sea shelf. The oldest is named the Kolguev Line and it marks the southern limit Ž.of the youngest till sheet SSU-III in the Barents Sea as well as the northern, erosional limit of SSU-IV and-V. The Kolguev Line marks the maximum extension of the Barents Ice Sheet during the Late Weichselian. The Kurentsovo Line, which is located 50–100 km further to the north, is much more expressed than the Kolguev Line and corresponds with long Ž.ice-pushed bedrock ridges and till ridges. Up to 100-m-thick accumulations of glaciomarine sediments SSU-II were mapped on the southern side of the Kolguev Line whereas less than 10–20 m where found on the northern side of the inferred ice sheet margin, indicating that the ice front remained at this position for considerable time. The youngest line is the southern continuation of the Admiralty Banks moraines, which have previously been mapped along the western margin of Novaya Zemlya. The Kolguev and Kurentsovo lines were both formed by an ice sheet centered in the Barents Sea, whereas the Admiralty Banks moraines were deposited from an ice sheet over Novaya Zemlya during the final stage of the