scholarly journals Continued investigations of Quaternary deposits in the area bounded by Søndre Strømfjord, the Inland Ice, and the Sukkertoppen Ice Cap

1971 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 13-17
Author(s):  
N.W TenBrink

The 1970 project was a continuation of more general 1969 investigations, some results and the objectives of which were reported by Weidick & Ten Brink (1969). The objectives of 1970 field work were to: (1) accurately determine altitudes and characteristics of marine limits; (2) complete a collection of marine shells and organic material from emerged marine deposits in order to derive a radiocarbon-dated delevelling history; (3) obtain cores of sediments from at least three lakes for pollen analysis and C-14 dating of lake-sea isolation times; (4) map in detail some glacial, glaciofluvial, and marine deposits known from 1969 investigations to be particularly important in reconstruction of Holocene events, and (5) conduct a lichenometric survey on young moraines near the lnland lce in order to estimate ages of the moraines. All the field objectives were achieved, and the results that can be stated before completion of analyses are summarised below.

1970 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 23-25
Author(s):  
A Weidick ◽  
N.W Ten Brink

The area investigated during 1969 is located approximate1y between 66° 10' and 67° 30' N, and 50° and 52° W, the eastem half of the West Greenland ice-free land area transected by Søndre Strømfjord. The principal objectives of the work were to map and describe the glacial and emerged marine deposits for a Quatemary map at 1:500 000 scale, and to collect material for establishing a radiometric chronology of former ice-margin positions and sea levels. In order to study as large an area as possible, the investigations north of Søndre Strømfjord and Sondrestrom Airbase were conducted by A. Weidick, the area south of this by N. W. Ten Brink.


1975 ◽  
Vol 75 ◽  
pp. 26-28
Author(s):  
R.L Christie

Lauge Koch recognised in 1921 that the Inland Ice had not overwhelmed all of North Greenland during the Glacial Epoch and, although his data were few, he suggested a generalised probable outward extent of the former ice cap (Koch, 1923, fig. 2). The mapping of the outward limit was based on the identification of erratics of rocks unique to parts of the present northern margin of the Inland Ice. Field work by Troelsen (1952) confirmed the existence of the limit in the vicinity of BØrglum Elv. Data collected in 1974 suggest that Koch's line, in the Børglum Elv region at least, was well located, but that the boundary relationships may be complex due to overlapping of limits of ice from the south and the north.


1979 ◽  
Vol 95 ◽  
pp. 82-85
Author(s):  
J.S Myers ◽  
H Austrheim ◽  
R.C.O Gill ◽  
B.E Gorman ◽  
D.C Rex

Work was carried out from the 80 ton cutter Tycho Brahe using 16 ft inflatable rubber dinghies between 24th July and 31st August 1978. In addition, the Nagssugtoqidian boundary was mapped westwards from Kangerdlugssuatsiaq to the inland ice cap by Bell 204 helicopter and part of the Kialineq region was mapped from a Piper Navajo aircraft (fig. 28). The Nagssugtoqidian boundary was examined on the north shore of Kangerdlugssuatsiaq and a section through the northem part of the Nagssugtoqidian mobile belt was mapped along the shores of the upper part of Sermilik by rubber dinghy. Part of the Angmagssalik charnockite complex was examined in detail around Angmagssalik and Kap Dan. The Tertiary plutonic centres of Kialineq and Kap Gustav Holm were mapped in detail as well as the coastal dyke swarm in these regions, and samples were collected from all the main plutonic units for petrology and isotope studies.


Author(s):  
Bjørn Thomassen ◽  
Peter R. Dawes ◽  
Agnete Steenfelt ◽  
Johan Ditlev Krebs

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Thomassen, B., Dawes, P. R., Steenfelt, A., & Krebs, J. D. (2002). Qaanaaq 2001: mineral exploration reconnaissance in North-West Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 191, 133-143. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v191.5141 _______________ Project Qaanaaq 2001, involving one season’s field work, was set up to investigate the mineral occurrences and potential of North-West Greenland between Olrik Fjord and Kap Alexander (77°10´N – 78°10´N; Fig. 1). Organised by the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) and the Bureau of Minerals and Petroleum (BMP), Government of Greenland, the project is mainly funded by the latter and has the overall goal of attracting the interest of the mining industry to the region. The investigated region – herein referred to as the Qaanaaq region – comprises 4300 km2 of ice-free land centred on Qaanaaq, the administrative capital of Qaanaap (Thule) municipality. Much of the region is characterised by a 500–800 m high plateau capped by local ice caps and intersected by fjords and glaciers. High dissected terrain occurs in Northumberland Ø and in the hinterland of Prudhoe Land where nunataks are common along the margin of the Inland Ice.


1997 ◽  
Vol 43 (143) ◽  
pp. 3-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.I. Morgan ◽  
C.W. Wookey ◽  
J. Li ◽  
T.D. van Ommen ◽  
W. Skinner ◽  
...  

AbstractThe aim of deep ice drilling on Law Dome, Antarctica, has been to exploit the special characteristics of Law Dome summit, i.e. low temperature and high accumulation near an ice divide, to obtain a high-resolution ice core for climatic/environmental studies of the Holocene and the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Drilling was completed in February 1993, when basal ice containing small fragments of rock was reached at a depth of 1196 m. Accurate ice dating, obtained by counting annual layers revealed by fine-detail δ18О, peroxide and electrical-conductivity measurements, is continuous down to 399 m, corresponding to a date of AD 1304. Sulphate concentration measurements, made around depths where conductivity tracing indicates volcanic fallout, allow confirmation of the dating (for Agung in 1963 and Tambora in 1815) or estimates of the eruption date from the ice dating (for the Kuwae, Vanuatu, eruption ~1457). The lower part of the core is dated by extrapolating the layer-counting using a simple model of the ice flow. At the LGM, ice-fabric measurements show a large decrease (250 to 14 mm2) in crystal size and a narrow maximum in c-axis vertically. The main zone of strong single-pole fabrics however, is located higher up in a broad zone around 900 m. Oxygen-isotope (δ18O) measurements show Holocene ice down to 1113 m, the LGM at 1133 m and warm (δ18O) about the same as Holocene) ice near the base of the ice sheet. The LGM/Holocene δ18O shift of 7.0‰, only ~1‰ larger than for Vostok, indicates that Law Dome remained an independent ice cap and was not overridden by the inland ice sheet in the Glacial.


1988 ◽  
Vol 137 ◽  
pp. 118-118
Author(s):  
T.P Fletcher ◽  
A.K Higgins ◽  
J.S Peel

The first record of Middle Cambrian faunas of 'Atlantic' affinity from the Franklinian basin sequence of North Greenland was made by Poulsen (1969) who noted that previously described Greenland faunas were of 'Pacific' type. Field work by the Geological Survey of Greenland during the last decade has established that 'Atlantic' faunas are widespread in more outer shelfsequences along the northern coast of North Greenland while the 'Pacific' faunas occur within inner shelfsequences more to the south, near the margin of the Inland Ice. North Greenland preserves both faunas in dose geographical juxtaposition in only slightly tectonised geological settings. Thus, alatest Middle Cambrian trilobite fauna described by Robison (in press) from the Holm Dal Formation in an area some 40 km south of the presently discussed locality (and more inner shelf) includes a mixture of polymeroids characteristic of the Cedaria Zone of North America and agnostoids characteristic of the Lejopyge laevigata Zone of the Swedish standard zonation.


1986 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 121-126
Author(s):  
O.B Olesen

As part of the GGU programme for the regional mapping of the hydroelectric potential of West Greenland, glaciological and climatological investigations were continued at 'Amitsuloq' ice cap in 1985, while only glaciological measurements were made at Qapiarfiup sermia. The field programme at Qapiarfiup sermia was originally started in March 1981, whereas the permanent fieId station near 'Amitsuloq' ice cap (fig. 1) was first established in August of the same year. Briefreports of the work have been given by Olesen (1982), Olesen & Andreasen (1983), and Olesen (1985).


1988 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wu Xiaoling ◽  
Lonnie G. Thompson

A cooperative glacio-climatological ice-core drilling and analysis program, administered by LIGC and BPRC, has been carried out since 1984. The major objective of this study is to extract from the Dunde ice cap records of the general environmental conditions, which include drought, volcanic activity, moisture sources, glacier net balance and possibly temperature over the last 3000 years. In 1984 a group of 18 Chinese scientists and an American scientist spent 6 weeks on the Dunde ice cap. The central objective of their research was to evaluate the potential of the ice cap to yield a lengthy ice-core climate record. Results of the 1984 field work and 1985 laboratory analysis are submitted here. The Dunde ice cap (38°96′N, 96°24.5′E) is located in the north-eastern section of the Tibet plateau, China. Its length is 10.9 km; the width varies from 2.5 to 7.5 km. The total area of the ice cap is 57 km2. A 16 m core was drilled at the first site, located on a flat part of the ice cap, 5150 m a.s.l. A 10.2 m ice core was drilled at the ice cap summit (5300 m). A series of shallow cores and 2 m pits were excavated at each of the two sites and in the lower section of the ice cap. A mono-pulse radar unit was used to determine ice thickness. The ice thickness ranged between 94 and 167 m, with an average thickness of 140 m. Using a thermistor cable, minimum temperatures of −9.1° and −9.5 °C were measured in the 16 m hole and 10.2 m hole respectively. Microparticle analysis of the ice core from the Dunde ice cap revealed a very high dust content, on average 16 × 105 particles (≥0.63 to ≤16 μ in diameter) per ml of sample, i.e. 3−4 times higher than the microparticle content in the Quelccaya ice cap, Peru, and 100 times higher than in the core from Byrd Station, Antarctica. Oxygen-isotope content ranged between −12 and −14 per mil. Initially it was anticipated that the oxygen-isotope content would produce a more negative value in the Dunde ice cap. More work is required to explain the mechanism controlling δ18o variation in the ice core from the Dunde ice cap. The microparticles, oxygen-isotope content, conductivity, and tritium measurements, together with stratigraphy, temperature and density, are presented in the figures. The 40 year net-balance record reconstructed from the ice-core and oxygen-isotope profile is in good agreement with data from precipitation and major temperature trends obtained for the last 30 years from Delingha meteorological station, which is located 160 km south-east of the ice cap.


Antiquity ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 66 (251) ◽  
pp. 467-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Robinson

The study of insect remains, particularly Coleoptera (beetles), from archaeological deposits can give palaeoecological information on a wide range of aspects of site environment and human activity. Some of this supplements other lines of evidence, for example the results of pollen analysis and the identifications of macroscopic plant remains can be supported by the food plant requirements of the more host-specific phytophagous Coleoptera present in a sample. However, there are other aspects of site ecology for which insects provide the main evidence. In particular, there are distinct faunas associated with various categories of structural, stored and decaying organic material.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugeniya Filina ◽  
Olga Pilipenko ◽  
Yuliana Rostovtseva

<p>With the goal to provide the new magnetostratigraphic investigations of the Miocene marine deposits of the Black Sea Basin the forty-four oriented hand blocks of the Cop-Takyl section (45°N, 36°E, Kerch peninsula, Crimea) were collected during summer 2019 field work. The section is composed mainly of clays, has a total thickness of ~ 53 m and covered the Tarhanian stratigraphic interval. Standard paleomagnetic measurements have been performed to establish a new magnetostratigraphic record for the Cop-Takyl section. The composition of the ferromagnetic fraction was examined using dependences of magnetic susceptibility on temperature and saturation magnetic moment on temperature. These thermo magnetic analyzes showed that the low concentration of magnetite is the main carrier of the natural remanent magnetization NRM. Coercivity of remanence Bcr values, determined from backfield demagnetization measurements, range between ~34 and 91 mT. The structure of the magnetite grains is mainly pseudo-single domain. In order to determine true NRM directions, we studied the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility. The rock sample possesses a planar anisotropy, which is a characteristic of the normal sedimentary rocks. The alternating field demagnetization of the samples (three duplicates from each level) was used for obtaining NRM vector angle elements. Demagnetization results were analyzed using orthogonal plots and stereographic projections. Polarity components were isolated in most samples between 15-60 mT. The values of the declination D and inclination I of the NRM satisfactory agree for all three duplicates from each level. This allows to average angle elements and construct curves of I and D variations over the thickness of the section. New paleomagnetic data of the Cop-Takyl section will used for assessing the effect of astronomical cyclicity on sedimentation processes. This work was supported by Russian Science Foundation, project № 19-77-10075.</p>


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