Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4736258 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2006 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
This study reveals for the first time biostratigraphical evidence of nunataks emerging from the Late Weichselian ice-sheet in central Scandinavia. Almost 1 m of minerogenic basal layers from Lake Flåfattjønn, 1110 m a.s.l., at Tynset, Norway, was deposited in the Lateglacial, possibly as early as 16,000 cal. yr BP. The sediments contain well-preserved remains of plants, diatoms and chironomids and indicate: (1) a mosaic pioneer vegetation of dwarf-shrub tundra, snow bed vegetation and xerophytes on wind-blown ridges, (2) an ice-free lake during summers with clear water at low pH due to little inwash, (3) a continental climate with summers slightly warmer than today (ca 10 °C), and most probably with very cold winters, according to indications of permafrost, and (4) a hiatus/reduced sedimentation during at least the first half of the Younger Dryas when the lake was sealed by a more-or-less permanent ice-cover. The existence of Lateglacial nunataks indicates a thin and multi-domed Lateglacial ice-sheet in Scandinavia. Early migration of arctic-alpine plants to nunataks could explain their centric distribution in S Norway. Furthermore, vegetation establishment on the Flåfatet Lateglacial nunatak indicates that S Norway could have been vegetated by successions along the retreating ice from alpine nunataks and from coastal and southern areas. The upland and lowland vegetation met at the final deglaciation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Aage Paus, Gaute Velle, Jorunn Larsen, Atle Nesje, Ãyvind Lie,