QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS | 卷:267 |
The Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland: A review of Late Weichselian glaciation | |
Article | |
Boyes, Benjamin M.1  Linch, Lorna D.1  Pearce, Danni M.2  Kolka, Vasili V.3  Nash, David J.1,4  | |
[1] Univ Brighton, Sch Environm & Technol, Lewes Rd, Brighton BN2 4GJ, E Sussex, England | |
[2] Norwegian Univ Life Sci, Fac Environm Sci & Nat Resource Management, Postbox 5003, N-5003 As, Norway | |
[3] Russian Acad Sci, Kola Sci Ctr, Geol Inst, Apatity 184209, Russia | |
[4] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, Private Bag 3, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa | |
关键词: Glacier reconstruction; Geomorphology; Kola Peninsula; Russian Lapland; Late Weichselian; Fennoscandian Ice Sheet; Russia; | |
DOI : 10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.107087 | |
来源: Elsevier | |
【 摘 要 】
The Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland (Murmansk Oblast, northwest Arctic Russia) represents a major sector of the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet (FIS) where empirical geomorphological, sedimentological, and chronological data are lacking and thus, where the pattern, style, and timing of glaciation is not well established. In this study, we present a critical review of published empirical data and interpretations of Late Weichselian (c. 40-10 ka) glaciation for the region. The review includes, for the first time, information published in Russian-language journal articles (n = 37), and is accompanied by a new Geographic Information System (GIS) numerical age database (spanning 472.3-6.2 ka) that collates known published numerical dates associated with the advance and retreat of the FIS in the study area. Our review suggests that an ice mass existed over the Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland during the Early-Middle Weichselian (c. 115-40 ka), and likely retreated during the angstrom lesund interstadial (c. 38-34 ka). During the Late Weichselian, it is likely that the FIS advanced eastwards across Russian Lapland and the Kola Peninsula, establishing the White Sea Ice Stream before the local-Last Glacial Maximum (c. 19-15 ka). Through an evaluation of the existing Last Glacial-Interglacial Transition (c. 20-10 ka) glaciation models for the region, we propose that the Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland was deglaciated by the FIS, rather than the Ponoy Ice Cap or the Kara Sea Ice Sheet. In collating, discussing, and critically evaluating empirical data and interpretations, this paper provides a valuable resource to inform FIS dynamics at both a regional-and ice sheet-scale, and offers a framework through which numerical ice sheet models can be constrained. Precise FIS dynamics on the Kola Peninsula and Russian Lapland, including the position of the Younger Dryas ice marginal zone, remain unclear due to low-resolution geomorphological data. In concluding, we recommend that further work is needed in the form of a revised glacial reconstruction using high-resolution, peninsula-wide geomorphological data. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
【 授权许可】
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