地质学
沉积沉积环境
雪
冰川
全新世
自然地理学
冰期
沉积岩
大洪水
气候变化
融水
碎片
降水
古生物学
地貌学
海洋学
考古
构造盆地
地理
气象学
作者
Kristian Vasskog,Atle Nesje,Eivind N. Støren,Nicolás Waldmann,Emmanuel Chapron,Daniel Arizteguí
出处
期刊:The Holocene
[SAGE Publishing]
日期:2011-02-22
卷期号:21 (4): 597-614
被引量:87
标识
DOI:10.1177/0959683610391316
摘要
Two lacustrine sediment cores from Oldevatnet in western Norway have been studied in order to produce a record of floods, mass-wasting events and glacier fluctuations during the last 7300 years. River floods, density currents and snow-avalanches have deposited distinct ‘event layers’ at the lake floor throughout this time interval. In this study, a novel approach has been applied to distinguish event layers from the continuous background sedimentation, using Rb/Sr-ratios from X-Ray Fluorescence data. Grain-size distribution and the sedimentological parameters ‘mean’ and ‘sorting’ were used to further infer the depositional processes behind each layer. Our data suggest a record dominated by snow-avalanches, with the largest activity occurring during the ‘Little Ice Age’ (LIA). This increase in snow-avalanche activity observed during the LIA was probably caused by a combination of generally increasing winter precipitation and the advance of local glaciers towards the steep valley sides. Several fluctuations in snow-avalanche activity are also recognized prior to the LIA. Proxies of glacial activity from the background sediments indicate a similar development as earlier palaeoclimatic reconstructions from the area. It differs from previous reconstructions, however, by suggesting a lower glacial activity in the period from 2200 to 1000 cal. yr BP.
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