Slow, patchy landscape evolution in northern Sweden despite repeated ice-sheet glaciation

Author(s):  
A.P. Stroeven ◽  
J. Harbor ◽  
D. Fabel ◽  
J. Kleman ◽  
C. Hättestrand ◽  
...  
The Holocene ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-94
Author(s):  
Therese Ekholm

This paper deals with the study of the ecology of early Holocene, 9000-4000 cal BC, specifically human and faunal dispersal into the Norrland and Dalarna areas of northern Sweden. It has been hypothesised that this region of Sweden was settled by hunter-gatherer groups of Butovo/Veretye ancestry moving in from the eastern taiga zone and at the same time groups from the West Scandinavian coast were moving north following the melting Weichselian ice sheet. Due to the speed of the melting ice these two groups must have encountered each other in the central part of northern Sweden. This article discusses the environment of these two separate groups and the possible consequences of their encounter, informed by results from the zooarchaeological analysis of burnt, radiocarbon dated bones from sites spanning much of Norrland and Dalarna. A compilation of previously dated sites are presented, and also new 14C dates from excavated sites. The northern population preferred to hunt forest game and held on to it for a long time even if sea mammals were available. The southern population, on the other hand, hunted sea mammals and forest game through the whole period.


2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 724-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stewart S.R. Jamieson ◽  
Chris R. Stokes ◽  
Neil Ross ◽  
David M. Rippin ◽  
Robert G. Bingham ◽  
...  

AbstractIn 1976, David Sugden and Brian John developed a classification for Antarctic landscapes of glacial erosion based upon exposed and eroded coastal topography, providing insight into the past glacial dynamics of the Antarctic ice sheets. We extend this classification to cover the continental interior of Antarctica by analysing the hypsometry of the subglacial landscape using a recently released dataset of bed topography (BEDMAP2). We used the existing classification as a basis for first developing a low-resolution description of landscape evolution under the ice sheet before building a more detailed classification of patterns of glacial erosion. Our key finding is that a more widespread distribution of ancient, preserved alpine landscapes may survive beneath the Antarctic ice sheets than has been previously recognized. Furthermore, the findings suggest that landscapes of selective erosion exist further inland than might be expected, and may reflect the presence of thinner, less extensive ice in the past. Much of the selective nature of erosion may be controlled by pre-glacial topography, and especially by the large-scale tectonic structure and fluvial valley network. The hypotheses of landscape evolution presented here can be tested by future surveys of the Antarctic ice sheet bed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (11) ◽  
pp. 1089-1102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Burke ◽  
M. Justin Wilkinson

African landscape evolution since 66 Ma reflects interactions among parts of the Earth system from the Core to the Biosphere. We stress changes in those interactions in three events that have dominated landscape development: (i) a climatic revolution when the circumpolar current and the East Antarctic ice sheet first formed ∼37 Ma; (ii) a tectonic revolution at ∼32 Ma dominated by elevation of ∼30 topographic structural swells continent-wide; and (iii) a second climatic revolution in a Northern Hemisphere cooling event (at ∼2.7 Ma) that triggered Sahara desert initiation and the beginning of glacial cycles in the Northern Hemisphere (∼2.15 Ma). We recognize the following distinct features of the great Afro-Arabian continent (∼40 M km2) that show its relationship to Earth structure and processes: deep mantle structure and dynamics, plate motion with respect to that structure, especially plate-arrest (∼32 Ma). The topographic, erosional, geomorphic, and depositional modifications following that tectonic event were strongly influenced by changes around the continent in oceanic and atmospheric circulation that affected the entire continent. Atmospheric circulation changes since ∼34 Ma have involved zonal winds, the ITCZ, desert formation and destruction, the evolution of the persistent (since ∼35 Ma) Antarctic ice sheet, and since ∼2 Ma of the rapidly cycling Eurasian ice sheets. We explain that a widely supported idea that ancient erosion surfaces have survived at high elevations in Africa is the result of a failure to recognize that the present elevations of the continent’s swells are dynamically maintained, but do not display a thermochronological signature because they are young (less than ∼32 My), so that conduction of heat from shallow convection cells has not yet reached the Earth’s surface.


2013 ◽  
Vol 381 (1) ◽  
pp. 353-395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bethan J. Davies ◽  
Neil F. Glasser ◽  
Jonathan L. Carrivick ◽  
Michael J. Hambrey ◽  
John L. Smellie ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. 102-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilia Richardson ◽  
Per Holmlund

Passglaciären is a small cirque glacier in the Kebnekaise massif, northern Sweden. It is frozen to its bed over more than 70% of its area, and under present climatic conditions has little effect on cirque formation. More favourable conditions for cirque glacier erosion during the Holocene are of short duration. Assuming similar conditions during previous interglacials, it is suggested that forms such as the Passglaciären cirque developed mainly during the initial phases of glacials when they were part of networks of large valley glaciers or of a small warm-based mountain-centred ice sheet. Passglaciären has been examined in order to evaluate its erosive capacity and its association with the subglacial cirque morphology. The methods used are radar surveys and direct ice-temperature measurements. Erosion is restricted to a small section of the glacier bed, at present resulting in only partial deepening of the cirque and erosion of the backwall. In cold, arid regions with extensive permafrost, small cirque glaciers are largely frozen to the bed, and therefore cannot contribute significantly to cirque formation. In such regions glacial erosion by larger temperate glaciers is more likely to be the major cause of cirque excavation.


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