Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard

One of four marine cores of glacial sediments collected from a water depth of about 1200 m at Vestnesa Ridge (west of Svalbard) contained small fragments of coal, charcoal and moss. This material was restricted to a single level, and 14C dating of bivalves both above and below indicates an age of c....

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Published in:Lethaia
Main Authors: Hanken, Nils-Martin, Sztybor, Kamila, Høeg, Helge I., Karlsen, Dag Arild, Rasmussen, Tine Lander, Abay, Tesfamariam Berhane
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10852/97904
https://doi.org/10.18261/let.55.4.6
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spelling ftoslouniv:oai:www.duo.uio.no:10852/97904 2023-05-15T13:25:36+02:00 Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard ENEngelskEnglishLate Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard Hanken, Nils-Martin Sztybor, Kamila Høeg, Helge I. Karlsen, Dag Arild Rasmussen, Tine Lander Abay, Tesfamariam Berhane 2022-11-23T17:24:32Z http://hdl.handle.net/10852/97904 https://doi.org/10.18261/let.55.4.6 EN eng NFR/223259 Hanken, Nils-Martin Sztybor, Kamila Høeg, Helge I. Karlsen, Dag Arild Rasmussen, Tine Lander Abay, Tesfamariam Berhane . Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard. Lethaia: An International Journal of Palaeontology and Stratigraphy. 2022 http://hdl.handle.net/10852/97904 2079501 info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.jtitle=Lethaia: An International Journal of Palaeontology and Stratigraphy&rft.volume=&rft.spage=&rft.date=2022 Lethaia: An International Journal of Palaeontology and Stratigraphy 55 4 1 13 https://doi.org/10.18261/let.55.4.6 Attribution 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ CC-BY 0024-1164 Journal article Tidsskriftartikkel Peer reviewed PublishedVersion 2022 ftoslouniv https://doi.org/10.18261/let.55.4.6 2022-12-07T23:36:11Z One of four marine cores of glacial sediments collected from a water depth of about 1200 m at Vestnesa Ridge (west of Svalbard) contained small fragments of coal, charcoal and moss. This material was restricted to a single level, and 14C dating of bivalves both above and below indicates an age of c. 18.0–15.5 kyr BP. Chemical analyses of the coal indicate that the provenance area was from the northern part of Andøya, North Norway. The moss fragment was identified as Aulacomnium turgidum, which is a well-known species from the northern part of Andøya, which was an ice-free refugium with tundra vegetation during the Weichselian maximum. One small piece of charcoal with reasonably well-preserved cell structures is derived from burnt Salix sp. These findings are important, because they demonstrate the presence of drift ice carrying organic material from the northern part of Andøya towards the west coast of Svalbard during Heinrich event H1, an event of extensive ice-rafting in the Nordic seas. This also implies that some components of the vascular plant communities growing on Svalbard today, might originally have been imported as seeds floating on sea ice, before stranding along the coast of Svalbard. The plant colonization of Svalbard can thus have started already during Heinrich event H1. The finding of charcoal can only be explained by a fire due to lightning and not by campfire, because the first human population arrived in northern Norway at a much later time (probably during Preboreal). The charcoal is thus from the oldest known wild fire in Norway. Article in Journal/Newspaper Andøya Fram Strait Nordic Seas North Norway Northern Norway Sea ice Svalbard Tundra Universitet i Oslo: Digitale utgivelser ved UiO (DUO) Andøya ENVELOPE(13.982,13.982,68.185,68.185) Norway Svalbard Lethaia 55 4 1 13
institution Open Polar
collection Universitet i Oslo: Digitale utgivelser ved UiO (DUO)
op_collection_id ftoslouniv
language English
description One of four marine cores of glacial sediments collected from a water depth of about 1200 m at Vestnesa Ridge (west of Svalbard) contained small fragments of coal, charcoal and moss. This material was restricted to a single level, and 14C dating of bivalves both above and below indicates an age of c. 18.0–15.5 kyr BP. Chemical analyses of the coal indicate that the provenance area was from the northern part of Andøya, North Norway. The moss fragment was identified as Aulacomnium turgidum, which is a well-known species from the northern part of Andøya, which was an ice-free refugium with tundra vegetation during the Weichselian maximum. One small piece of charcoal with reasonably well-preserved cell structures is derived from burnt Salix sp. These findings are important, because they demonstrate the presence of drift ice carrying organic material from the northern part of Andøya towards the west coast of Svalbard during Heinrich event H1, an event of extensive ice-rafting in the Nordic seas. This also implies that some components of the vascular plant communities growing on Svalbard today, might originally have been imported as seeds floating on sea ice, before stranding along the coast of Svalbard. The plant colonization of Svalbard can thus have started already during Heinrich event H1. The finding of charcoal can only be explained by a fire due to lightning and not by campfire, because the first human population arrived in northern Norway at a much later time (probably during Preboreal). The charcoal is thus from the oldest known wild fire in Norway.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hanken, Nils-Martin
Sztybor, Kamila
Høeg, Helge I.
Karlsen, Dag Arild
Rasmussen, Tine Lander
Abay, Tesfamariam Berhane
spellingShingle Hanken, Nils-Martin
Sztybor, Kamila
Høeg, Helge I.
Karlsen, Dag Arild
Rasmussen, Tine Lander
Abay, Tesfamariam Berhane
Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard
author_facet Hanken, Nils-Martin
Sztybor, Kamila
Høeg, Helge I.
Karlsen, Dag Arild
Rasmussen, Tine Lander
Abay, Tesfamariam Berhane
author_sort Hanken, Nils-Martin
title Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard
title_short Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard
title_full Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard
title_fullStr Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard
title_full_unstemmed Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard
title_sort late quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at vestnesa ridge, fram strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at svalbard
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/10852/97904
https://doi.org/10.18261/let.55.4.6
long_lat ENVELOPE(13.982,13.982,68.185,68.185)
geographic Andøya
Norway
Svalbard
geographic_facet Andøya
Norway
Svalbard
genre Andøya
Fram Strait
Nordic Seas
North Norway
Northern Norway
Sea ice
Svalbard
Tundra
genre_facet Andøya
Fram Strait
Nordic Seas
North Norway
Northern Norway
Sea ice
Svalbard
Tundra
op_source 0024-1164
op_relation NFR/223259
Hanken, Nils-Martin Sztybor, Kamila Høeg, Helge I. Karlsen, Dag Arild Rasmussen, Tine Lander Abay, Tesfamariam Berhane . Late Quaternary terrigenous plant and coaly fragments found at Vestnesa Ridge, Fram Strait: implications for postglacial plant colonization at Svalbard. Lethaia: An International Journal of Palaeontology and Stratigraphy. 2022
http://hdl.handle.net/10852/97904
2079501
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