Reconstructing the character of the eastern sector of the Scandinavian ice sheet using remote sensing

The extensive glacial landforms in the Baltic States and neighbouring countries have been used to infer the dynamic behaviour of the Scandinavian ice sheet. Landsat TM imagery was acquired of the Baltic States and neighbouring regions south of the Gulf of Finland (the Eastern Baltic region) in digit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Perry, Jonathan Eric Hayward
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: The University of Edinburgh 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1842/33513
Description
Summary:The extensive glacial landforms in the Baltic States and neighbouring countries have been used to infer the dynamic behaviour of the Scandinavian ice sheet. Landsat TM imagery was acquired of the Baltic States and neighbouring regions south of the Gulf of Finland (the Eastern Baltic region) in digital form. Computer image processing techniques were used to enhance the glacial geomorphology without enhancing the pattern of agricultural land usage. Mapping of glacial landforms was done (on-screen) using computer software. Using computers allowed the interpretations to be manipulated, analysed and compared with further information from digital elevation models, land cover maps and published literature /maps. This allowed the limit of Weichselian ice to be delineated using four different methods. Streamlined glacial lineations, including megaflutes, drumlins, megadrumlins and elongated hills have been mapped using this technique. Coherent groups of lineations were identified as flow sets, which were considered to have been formed by the same phase of ice flow. Where the lineations of different flow sets intersect, the temporal relationship between the flow sets, and therefore between the ice flows, was determined. While pre- Weichselian phases of ice flow were identified, it was concluded that the majority of lineations within the Eastern Baltic formed during the Late Weichselian. Long (up to 21 km), well-defined lineations were found to have formed during the Late Weichselian maximum when the ice velocities were greatest. These form flow sets with a north -south trend. Lineations from the final deglaciation are shorter in length and form flow sets orientated at 170 °. During the final deglaciation ice streams developed. Interstream areas generally coincide with regions of elevated bed rock. The interpretations resulting from these observations were combined with similar data from Finland to create a data set covering the area from the ice divide to beyond the limit of Weichselian ice. The spatial ...