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The Late Quaternary Skagerrak and its depositional environment
Author(s) -
THIEDE JÖRN
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
boreas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.95
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1502-3885
pISSN - 0300-9483
DOI - 10.1111/j.1502-3885.1987.tb00116.x
Subject(s) - terrigenous sediment , geology , fjord , oceanography , quaternary , sedimentary depositional environment , structural basin , paleontology
The Skagerrak is a key region for our understanding of the Late Quaternary history of the East North Sea, of the entire Baltic basin and of the adjacent Scandinavian land areas. The depositional history of the postglacial Skagerrak began after the ice margin withdrew from Jutland to close to the modern Norwegian coast around 14 ka B.P. to 13 ka B.P. The Skagerrak was immediately filled by marine waters from the Norwegian Sea, but retained a fjord‐like shape until approximately 10.2 ka B.P., when a connection opened across central Sweden to the Baltic Ice Lake. This seaway closed around 9 ka B.P., but a new seaway to the Baltic basin opened subsequently (probably close to 8.5 ka B.P.) through the Danish Belts. At about 10 ka B.P. the Skagerrak ‘fjord’ also started to change shape due to the flooding of the large former land area under the modern North Sea. Paleo‐geography and ‐bathymetry of these changes can now be quantified in great detail. The young Quaternary sediments of the Skagerrak consist of fine‐grained clays with minor amounts of silty and sandy material and are mostly of terrigenous origin, whereas biogenic components in general make up only a minor proportion of the bulk sediment. Prior to 10 ka B.P. a major portion of these deposits originated from the Fennoscandian regions N and E of the Skagerrak, while ice‐rafting contributed coarse terrigenous components to the usually fine‐grained sediments and while it was filled by brackish surface and cold polar bottom waters. At approximately 10 ka B.P., more temperate waters started to fill the Skagerrak and a good portion of the sediment seems to have originated from areas to the South. The Norwegian Coastal Current can only be documented for the past 7 ka; subtle changes of the pelagic and benthic environments could also be documented for later intervals.

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