Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland

A few kilometres to the west of the Kemijärvi church there is a ridge‑and­-mound field. The ridges and mounds are grouped in chains, which cross each other at right angles to form a network‑like pattern. The chains can be divided into formations parallel to the last glacial flow (radial, longitudina...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Heikki Kurimo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 1977
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/f6d10b501f7d49f59b22a1465c2f7cc6
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:f6d10b501f7d49f59b22a1465c2f7cc6 2023-05-15T17:01:52+02:00 Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland Heikki Kurimo 1977-01-01T00:00:00Z https://doaj.org/article/f6d10b501f7d49f59b22a1465c2f7cc6 EN eng Geographical Society of Finland https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/9559 https://doaj.org/toc/1798-5617 1798-5617 https://doaj.org/article/f6d10b501f7d49f59b22a1465c2f7cc6 Fennia: International Journal of Geography, Vol 153, Iss 1 (1977) Geography (General) G1-922 article 1977 ftdoajarticles 2022-12-31T02:33:49Z A few kilometres to the west of the Kemijärvi church there is a ridge‑and­-mound field. The ridges and mounds are grouped in chains, which cross each other at right angles to form a network‑like pattern. The chains can be divided into formations parallel to the last glacial flow (radial, longitudinal) and formations parallel to the ice edge (transversal). Both radial and transversal formations consist of material like kalix till. To judge from the material, structure and morphology, all these forms can be explained as supraglacial or glacial karst dead‑ice accumulations. They developed under deglaciation conditions similar to those now prevailing at the ice edge in Spitsbergen. Melting of the inactive ice edge buried under a thick mantle of melt‑out material took place in shallow water. The general orientation of the visible ice front during the deglaciation phase was from the south‑west to the north‑east, although in fact big inactive ice bodies existed under the mantle of various supraglacial ac­cumulations long after this phase. The dead‑ice features so characteristic for the deglaciation forms of the study area were caused by the slow melting in the final deglaciption phase. Article in Journal/Newspaper Kemijärvi Northern Finland Spitsbergen Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Kalix ENVELOPE(23.156,23.156,65.853,65.853)
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language English
topic Geography (General)
G1-922
spellingShingle Geography (General)
G1-922
Heikki Kurimo
Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland
topic_facet Geography (General)
G1-922
description A few kilometres to the west of the Kemijärvi church there is a ridge‑and­-mound field. The ridges and mounds are grouped in chains, which cross each other at right angles to form a network‑like pattern. The chains can be divided into formations parallel to the last glacial flow (radial, longitudinal) and formations parallel to the ice edge (transversal). Both radial and transversal formations consist of material like kalix till. To judge from the material, structure and morphology, all these forms can be explained as supraglacial or glacial karst dead‑ice accumulations. They developed under deglaciation conditions similar to those now prevailing at the ice edge in Spitsbergen. Melting of the inactive ice edge buried under a thick mantle of melt‑out material took place in shallow water. The general orientation of the visible ice front during the deglaciation phase was from the south‑west to the north‑east, although in fact big inactive ice bodies existed under the mantle of various supraglacial ac­cumulations long after this phase. The dead‑ice features so characteristic for the deglaciation forms of the study area were caused by the slow melting in the final deglaciption phase.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Heikki Kurimo
author_facet Heikki Kurimo
author_sort Heikki Kurimo
title Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland
title_short Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland
title_full Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland
title_fullStr Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland
title_full_unstemmed Pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western Kemijärvi, Northern Finland
title_sort pattern of dead-ice deglaciation forms in western kemijärvi, northern finland
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
publishDate 1977
url https://doaj.org/article/f6d10b501f7d49f59b22a1465c2f7cc6
long_lat ENVELOPE(23.156,23.156,65.853,65.853)
geographic Kalix
geographic_facet Kalix
genre Kemijärvi
Northern Finland
Spitsbergen
genre_facet Kemijärvi
Northern Finland
Spitsbergen
op_source Fennia: International Journal of Geography, Vol 153, Iss 1 (1977)
op_relation https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/9559
https://doaj.org/toc/1798-5617
1798-5617
https://doaj.org/article/f6d10b501f7d49f59b22a1465c2f7cc6
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