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The Age and Origin of the Little Diomede Island Upland Surface
Author(s) -
Lyn Gualtieri,
Julie BrighamGrette
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
arctic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1923-1245
pISSN - 0004-0843
DOI - 10.14430/arctic759
Subject(s) - subaerial , terrace (agriculture) , geology , outcrop , glacial period , peninsula , loess , sea level , pleistocene , cliff , physical geography , oceanography , paleontology , geomorphology , archaeology , geography
Geomorphology and projected uplift rates indicate that the upland surface of Little Diomede Island may represent a high sea level stand that occurred 2.6 million years ago in the Bering Strait. The 350-363 m upland surface of the island cou ld be correlative with the York terrace, an uplifted marine terrace previously recognized on the southern flanks of the York Mountains, Seward Peninsula. The modern surface of Little Diomede Island is composed of a cryoplanation terrace enclosing a central blockfield and rimmed with tors. Beryllium-10 cosmogenic isotope analysis of two tors and three outcrops from the upper surface indicate the island has been under the influence of a subaerial periglacial environment at least for the last 36 000 ye ars (MIS 3) and probably for 254 000 (MIS 7/8). Unequivocal evidence does not exist to support glaciation of Little Diomede Island.

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