Resumé
The Kattegat region is located in the wrench zone between the
Fennoscandian shield and the Danish Basin that has repeatedly been
tectonically active. The latest ice advances during the Quaternary in
the southern part of Kattegat were from the north-east, east and
south-east (Larsen et al. 2009). The last deglaciation took place at c. 18 to 17 ka BP (Lagerlund & Houmark-Nielsen 1993; Houmark-Nielsen et al.
2012) and was followed by inundation of the sea that formed a
palaeo-Kattegat (Conradsen 1995) with a sea level that was relatively
high because of glacio-isostatic depression. Around 17 ka BP, the ice
margin retreated to the Øresund region and meltwater from the retreating
ice drained into Kattegat. Over the next millennia, the region was
characterised by regression because the isostatic rebound of the crust
surpassed the ongoing eustatic sea-level rise, and a regional lowstand
followed at the late glacial to Holocene transition (Mörner 1969; Thiede
1987; Lagerlund & Houmark-Nielsen 1993; Jensen et al. 2002a, b).
| Originalsprog | Engelsk |
|---|---|
| Sider (fra-til) | 21-24 |
| Antal sider | 4 |
| Tidsskrift | Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin |
| Vol/bind | 28 |
| DOI | |
| Status | Udgivet - 10 jul. 2013 |
Programområde
- Programområde 5: Natur og klima
Fingeraftryk
Dyk ned i forskningsemnerne om 'Late glacial to early Holocene development of southern Kattegat'. Sammen danner de et unikt fingeraftryk.Citationsformater
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