Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44

In the neighbourhood of Oobloyah Bay various phenomena ean be eneountered whieh point to a ularge-seale uplift of shorelines, i.e. to an emergence of 200 m. Delta terraces, deltaic fan terraces and glacio-marine sands are regarded by the author as being the most reliable evidence of this. The marine...

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Main Author: Völk, Hellmut R
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.745544
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.745544
id ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.745544
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.745544 2023-05-15T16:05:57+02:00 Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44 Völk, Hellmut R 2010 text/tab-separated-values https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.745544 https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.745544 en eng PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode cc-by-3.0 CC-BY Geology, comment ELEVATION Age, dated Age, dated standard deviation Sample code/label Geological sample Age, 14C conventional Dataset dataset Supplementary Dataset 2010 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.745544 2022-02-09T13:28:19Z In the neighbourhood of Oobloyah Bay various phenomena ean be eneountered whieh point to a ularge-seale uplift of shorelines, i.e. to an emergence of 200 m. Delta terraces, deltaic fan terraces and glacio-marine sands are regarded by the author as being the most reliable evidence of this. The marine limit documented by glacio-marine sand is to be found at ~170 m a.s.l. Hints of ancient shorelines located at a higher level exist only in the shape of badly preserved raised beaches. They were classified as less reliable records of past sea-levels, due to the lack of marine fossils and/or drift wood, and furthermore because those forms had been strongly influenced by periglacial processes. Deltaic deposits are of more importance in this context. The glacio-marine deltaic sands of several terrace levels contain terrestrial plant remnants which delivered C14dates. Using these dates und the relative elevations of terraces the emergenee of the area investigated could be recorded. This occured in a series of phases (and steps) which were summarized into two periods: an early period of emergenee which took place from at least 25 300 years B.P. to later than 17 340 years B.P. and a later one from at least 12 870 years B.P. up to the present day. The emergence seems to represent a discontinuous but regular sequence of relative sea level movements without intermittent submergence. Since the deltaic fans of the early emergence period were accumulated by sediments through glacio-fluvial channels of an adjacent glacier body the appropriate location of this glacial stage for one of the glaciers delivering meltwater (Nukapingwa Glacier) could be reconstructed. This stage of the glacier appears to belong to a retreating phase of the Mid-Wisconsin (?).The later period of emergence resulted in six rather glacio-marine delta terrace generations at the mouths of the main rivers with glaciofluvial regimen debouching into the Oobloyah Bay. A connection of this emergence with the glacial history of the field area is discussed. If one may rely on the age determinations of land derived plant fossils and their application for the climatic history of the area investigated, it must be concluded that the Heidelberg Valley, to a large extent, was alreaely deglaciated 25 000 years ago. The existence of a "Cockburn"-Phase in the sense of a major readvanee in Late Wisconsin times appears to be doubtful, or has been developed rather weakly. Dataset Ellesmere Island glacier* DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Ellesmere Island Canada Cockburn ENVELOPE(-62.295,-62.295,-64.018,-64.018) Oobloyah Bay ENVELOPE(-83.332,-83.332,80.785,80.785) Nukapingwa Glacier ENVELOPE(-82.964,-82.964,80.881,80.881) Neil Peninsula ENVELOPE(-82.832,-82.832,80.785,80.785)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Geology, comment
ELEVATION
Age, dated
Age, dated standard deviation
Sample code/label
Geological sample
Age, 14C conventional
spellingShingle Geology, comment
ELEVATION
Age, dated
Age, dated standard deviation
Sample code/label
Geological sample
Age, 14C conventional
Völk, Hellmut R
Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44
topic_facet Geology, comment
ELEVATION
Age, dated
Age, dated standard deviation
Sample code/label
Geological sample
Age, 14C conventional
description In the neighbourhood of Oobloyah Bay various phenomena ean be eneountered whieh point to a ularge-seale uplift of shorelines, i.e. to an emergence of 200 m. Delta terraces, deltaic fan terraces and glacio-marine sands are regarded by the author as being the most reliable evidence of this. The marine limit documented by glacio-marine sand is to be found at ~170 m a.s.l. Hints of ancient shorelines located at a higher level exist only in the shape of badly preserved raised beaches. They were classified as less reliable records of past sea-levels, due to the lack of marine fossils and/or drift wood, and furthermore because those forms had been strongly influenced by periglacial processes. Deltaic deposits are of more importance in this context. The glacio-marine deltaic sands of several terrace levels contain terrestrial plant remnants which delivered C14dates. Using these dates und the relative elevations of terraces the emergenee of the area investigated could be recorded. This occured in a series of phases (and steps) which were summarized into two periods: an early period of emergenee which took place from at least 25 300 years B.P. to later than 17 340 years B.P. and a later one from at least 12 870 years B.P. up to the present day. The emergence seems to represent a discontinuous but regular sequence of relative sea level movements without intermittent submergence. Since the deltaic fans of the early emergence period were accumulated by sediments through glacio-fluvial channels of an adjacent glacier body the appropriate location of this glacial stage for one of the glaciers delivering meltwater (Nukapingwa Glacier) could be reconstructed. This stage of the glacier appears to belong to a retreating phase of the Mid-Wisconsin (?).The later period of emergence resulted in six rather glacio-marine delta terrace generations at the mouths of the main rivers with glaciofluvial regimen debouching into the Oobloyah Bay. A connection of this emergence with the glacial history of the field area is discussed. If one may rely on the age determinations of land derived plant fossils and their application for the climatic history of the area investigated, it must be concluded that the Heidelberg Valley, to a large extent, was alreaely deglaciated 25 000 years ago. The existence of a "Cockburn"-Phase in the sense of a major readvanee in Late Wisconsin times appears to be doubtful, or has been developed rather weakly.
format Dataset
author Völk, Hellmut R
author_facet Völk, Hellmut R
author_sort Völk, Hellmut R
title Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44
title_short Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44
title_full Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44
title_fullStr Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44
title_full_unstemmed Tab. 1+2: C14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: Völk, Hellmut R (1980): Records of emergence around Oobloyah Bay and Neil Peninsula in connection with the Wisconsin deglaciation pattern, Ellesmere Island, N.W.T., Canada: a preliminary report. Polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44
title_sort tab. 1+2: c14-dates cf the older and younger emergence periods, supplement to: völk, hellmut r (1980): records of emergence around oobloyah bay and neil peninsula in connection with the wisconsin deglaciation pattern, ellesmere island, n.w.t., canada: a preliminary report. polarforschung, 50(1/2), 29-44
publisher PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science
publishDate 2010
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.745544
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.745544
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.295,-62.295,-64.018,-64.018)
ENVELOPE(-83.332,-83.332,80.785,80.785)
ENVELOPE(-82.964,-82.964,80.881,80.881)
ENVELOPE(-82.832,-82.832,80.785,80.785)
geographic Ellesmere Island
Canada
Cockburn
Oobloyah Bay
Nukapingwa Glacier
Neil Peninsula
geographic_facet Ellesmere Island
Canada
Cockburn
Oobloyah Bay
Nukapingwa Glacier
Neil Peninsula
genre Ellesmere Island
glacier*
genre_facet Ellesmere Island
glacier*
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
cc-by-3.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.745544
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