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Glacial lakes in the Torneträsk region, northern Sweden, are key to understanding regional deglaciation patterns and dynamicsPloeg, Karlijn January 2022 (has links)
The prospect of sea level rise due to melting ice sheets affirms the urgency of gaining knowledge on ice sheet dynamics during deglaciation. The Fennoscandian Ice Sheet serves as an analogue, whose retreat can be reconstructed from the geomorphological record. The recent development of a high-resolution LiDAR-derived elevation model can reveal new relationships between landforms, even for well-studied areas such as the Torneträsk region in northwestern Sweden. Therefore, this study aims to refine the reconstruction of the deglaciation in this region based on an updated glacial geomorphological map. A range of glacial landforms were mapped, which by means of an inversion model were utilized to form swarms representing spatially and temporally coherent ice sheet flow systems. Additionally, glacial lake traces allowed for the identification of ice margins that dammed lakes in Torneträsk, Rautasjaure, and other (former) lake basins. Eight glacial lake stages were identified for the Torneträsk basin, where final drainage occurred through Tornedalen. Over 20 glacial lake stages were identified for the Rautasjaure basin, where drainage occurred along the margins of a thinning ice lobe. The disparity between the glacial lake systems results from different damming mechanisms in relation to the contrasting topography of the basins. A strong topographic control on the retreat pattern is evident, as the ice sheet retreated southward in an orderly fashion in the premontane region, but disintegrated into ice lobes in the montane region. The temporal resolution of current dating techniques is insufficient to constrain the timing of ice retreat at the spatial scale of this study. Precise dating of the Pärvie fault would pinpoint the age of the ice margin which at the time of rupture was located between two glacial lake stages of Torneträsk. Collectively, this study provides data for better understanding the final retreat of the ice sheet and associated processes, such as interactions between glacial lakes and ice dynamics.
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Palaeoglaciology of the central Tibetan PlateauMorén, Björn January 2010 (has links)
<p>The glacial history of the Tibetan Plateau has long been a contentious topic with widely different reconstructions. For Tanggula Shan, an extensive mountain range on the central Tibetan Plateau, multiple glacial reconstruc- tions and studies on the glacial chronology have been presented. However, the glacial geomorphological record has been sparse resulting in insufficient data to fully infer the area’s palaeoglaciology. Focussing on four landform categories, glacial valleys, marginal moraines, hummocky terrain, and glacial lineations; a glacial geomorphological map was produced, using Landsat 7 ETM+ satellite imagery, SRTM digital elevation model, and Google Earth. This map, together with GIS analyses and available cosmogenic exposure and electron spin reso- nance ages from the study area, was used to investigate the extent of former glaciations. Cosmogenic exposure and electron spin resonance ages range from 18.4 ± 1.6 to 203.4 ± 33.2 ka (recalculated using the CRONUS calculator). The extent of the glacial footprint is restricted to the high mountain areas, and is similar in extent to earlier glacial reconstructions. This glacial footprint can tentatively be explained by a monsoonal influence in the southeast, with the influence diminishing to the northwest. Alternatively, the precipitation gradient might have resulted in cold-based ice in the west and warm-based ice in the east. These variations in ice regime could have left fewer traces of glaciation in the west, than in the east. There is no evidence supporting an ice sheet covering the entire Tibetan Plateau. Rather, the available data support a smaller ice field in the high mountain areas, with a maximum extent well before the Last Glacial Maximum.</p>
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Análise da eolução do ambiente proglacial das geleiras Ecology, Sphinks, Baranowski, Tower e Windy, Ilha Rei George, AntárticaPerondi, Cleiva January 2018 (has links)
Esta dissertação objetiva investigar a evolução geomorfológica dos ambientes proglaciais (geleiras Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower e Windy) da margem leste do campo de gelo Warszawa (62°12’0” S - 58°30’0” W) na Ilha Rei George, Antártica, entre 1956 - 2017. Dados obtidos por sensores remotos, como Aster GDEM2, imagens Sentinel-2 (2017) e WorldView-2 (2014), possibilitaram o mapeamento geomorfológico das formas de relevo de mesoescala proglaciais. A variação frontal e de área total das geleiras foi estimada e mapeada com dados de imagens de satélite (Sentinel-2 de 2017 e WorldView-2 de 2014) e vetores de variação frontal de 1956, 1979, 1988 e 2000. Evidenciou-se um contínuo processo de retração nas geleiras Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower e Windy, com perda total de área de 33%, 25%, 37%, 71% e 30%, respectivamente, no período. A geleira Windy apresentou mudanças recentes em seu término de maré para terrestre, formando uma área proglacial com a exposição de formas de relevo deposicionais glaciais. Estimou-se um aumento das áreas livres de gelo de 6,3km² no período entre 1956-2017. Em resposta ao processo de retração glacial, há exposição de formas de relevo nos ambientes livres de gelo na área de estudo com a formação da rede de drenagem fluvioglacial e glaciolacustre e a formação de ambientes proglaciais com exposição de morainas laterais, frontais, latero-frontais e eskers. As áreas livres de gelo recentes são suscetíveis a processos de retrabalhamento por ação gravitacional, eólica e pluvial. Foram determinados três estágios de evolução do ambiente proglacial das geleiras associadas às feições geomorfológicas geradas em cada fase. Como mudança ambiental detectada está a sucessão de ambientes proglaciais, paraglaciais e periglaciais. / This dissertation aims to investigate the proglacial geomorphological evolution (Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower and Windy glaciers) in the western sector of Warszawa Ice Cap (62°12’0” S 58° 30’ 0” W), Admiralty Bay coast, King George Island, Antarctica between 1956 and 2017. Data obtained by remote sensors, such as Aster GDEM2, Sentinel-2 (2017) and WorldView-2 (2014) images, were applied in geomorphological mapping of the proglacial mesoscale landforms. Glacial retreat and fluctuations of glaciers areas were estimated (using Sentinel-2 images, acquired in 2017, WorldView-2 data, acquired in 2014, and outline data of the 1956, 1979, 1988 and 2000). The results evidenced the continuous retreat processes in period for Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower and Windy glaciers, with of 33%, 25%, 37%, 71% and 30% of the area lost, respectively. The Windy glacier changed of outlet glacier for land terminus conditions in latest decades, with a recent proglacial environment development. In response to glacial retreat processes there is a glacial landforms exposition in new ice-free environments in the study area. Was recorded an increase of the 6.3km² in ice-free land areas between 1956 and 2017 in in the western sector of Warszawa Ice Cap. As response the retreat processes there are the development of the glacio-fluvial drainage network, glacio-lacustrine landforms and the formation of proglacial ice marginal environments with lateral moraines, lateral-frontal moraines, frontal moraines, eskers. Recent ice-free areas are susceptible to gravitational, wind and pluvial reworking process. Three stages of evolution of the proglacial environments of the glaciers associated with the geomorphological features formed in each phase and environmental changes in response the glacier retreat was determined. Was detected the succession of proglacial for paraglacial and periglacial environments as evidence of the environmental change.
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Análise da eolução do ambiente proglacial das geleiras Ecology, Sphinks, Baranowski, Tower e Windy, Ilha Rei George, AntárticaPerondi, Cleiva January 2018 (has links)
Esta dissertação objetiva investigar a evolução geomorfológica dos ambientes proglaciais (geleiras Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower e Windy) da margem leste do campo de gelo Warszawa (62°12’0” S - 58°30’0” W) na Ilha Rei George, Antártica, entre 1956 - 2017. Dados obtidos por sensores remotos, como Aster GDEM2, imagens Sentinel-2 (2017) e WorldView-2 (2014), possibilitaram o mapeamento geomorfológico das formas de relevo de mesoescala proglaciais. A variação frontal e de área total das geleiras foi estimada e mapeada com dados de imagens de satélite (Sentinel-2 de 2017 e WorldView-2 de 2014) e vetores de variação frontal de 1956, 1979, 1988 e 2000. Evidenciou-se um contínuo processo de retração nas geleiras Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower e Windy, com perda total de área de 33%, 25%, 37%, 71% e 30%, respectivamente, no período. A geleira Windy apresentou mudanças recentes em seu término de maré para terrestre, formando uma área proglacial com a exposição de formas de relevo deposicionais glaciais. Estimou-se um aumento das áreas livres de gelo de 6,3km² no período entre 1956-2017. Em resposta ao processo de retração glacial, há exposição de formas de relevo nos ambientes livres de gelo na área de estudo com a formação da rede de drenagem fluvioglacial e glaciolacustre e a formação de ambientes proglaciais com exposição de morainas laterais, frontais, latero-frontais e eskers. As áreas livres de gelo recentes são suscetíveis a processos de retrabalhamento por ação gravitacional, eólica e pluvial. Foram determinados três estágios de evolução do ambiente proglacial das geleiras associadas às feições geomorfológicas geradas em cada fase. Como mudança ambiental detectada está a sucessão de ambientes proglaciais, paraglaciais e periglaciais. / This dissertation aims to investigate the proglacial geomorphological evolution (Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower and Windy glaciers) in the western sector of Warszawa Ice Cap (62°12’0” S 58° 30’ 0” W), Admiralty Bay coast, King George Island, Antarctica between 1956 and 2017. Data obtained by remote sensors, such as Aster GDEM2, Sentinel-2 (2017) and WorldView-2 (2014) images, were applied in geomorphological mapping of the proglacial mesoscale landforms. Glacial retreat and fluctuations of glaciers areas were estimated (using Sentinel-2 images, acquired in 2017, WorldView-2 data, acquired in 2014, and outline data of the 1956, 1979, 1988 and 2000). The results evidenced the continuous retreat processes in period for Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower and Windy glaciers, with of 33%, 25%, 37%, 71% and 30% of the area lost, respectively. The Windy glacier changed of outlet glacier for land terminus conditions in latest decades, with a recent proglacial environment development. In response to glacial retreat processes there is a glacial landforms exposition in new ice-free environments in the study area. Was recorded an increase of the 6.3km² in ice-free land areas between 1956 and 2017 in in the western sector of Warszawa Ice Cap. As response the retreat processes there are the development of the glacio-fluvial drainage network, glacio-lacustrine landforms and the formation of proglacial ice marginal environments with lateral moraines, lateral-frontal moraines, frontal moraines, eskers. Recent ice-free areas are susceptible to gravitational, wind and pluvial reworking process. Three stages of evolution of the proglacial environments of the glaciers associated with the geomorphological features formed in each phase and environmental changes in response the glacier retreat was determined. Was detected the succession of proglacial for paraglacial and periglacial environments as evidence of the environmental change.
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Palaeoglaciology of the central Tibetan PlateauMorén, Björn January 2010 (has links)
The glacial history of the Tibetan Plateau has long been a contentious topic with widely different reconstructions. For Tanggula Shan, an extensive mountain range on the central Tibetan Plateau, multiple glacial reconstruc- tions and studies on the glacial chronology have been presented. However, the glacial geomorphological record has been sparse resulting in insufficient data to fully infer the area’s palaeoglaciology. Focussing on four landform categories, glacial valleys, marginal moraines, hummocky terrain, and glacial lineations; a glacial geomorphological map was produced, using Landsat 7 ETM+ satellite imagery, SRTM digital elevation model, and Google Earth. This map, together with GIS analyses and available cosmogenic exposure and electron spin reso- nance ages from the study area, was used to investigate the extent of former glaciations. Cosmogenic exposure and electron spin resonance ages range from 18.4 ± 1.6 to 203.4 ± 33.2 ka (recalculated using the CRONUS calculator). The extent of the glacial footprint is restricted to the high mountain areas, and is similar in extent to earlier glacial reconstructions. This glacial footprint can tentatively be explained by a monsoonal influence in the southeast, with the influence diminishing to the northwest. Alternatively, the precipitation gradient might have resulted in cold-based ice in the west and warm-based ice in the east. These variations in ice regime could have left fewer traces of glaciation in the west, than in the east. There is no evidence supporting an ice sheet covering the entire Tibetan Plateau. Rather, the available data support a smaller ice field in the high mountain areas, with a maximum extent well before the Last Glacial Maximum.
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Análise da eolução do ambiente proglacial das geleiras Ecology, Sphinks, Baranowski, Tower e Windy, Ilha Rei George, AntárticaPerondi, Cleiva January 2018 (has links)
Esta dissertação objetiva investigar a evolução geomorfológica dos ambientes proglaciais (geleiras Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower e Windy) da margem leste do campo de gelo Warszawa (62°12’0” S - 58°30’0” W) na Ilha Rei George, Antártica, entre 1956 - 2017. Dados obtidos por sensores remotos, como Aster GDEM2, imagens Sentinel-2 (2017) e WorldView-2 (2014), possibilitaram o mapeamento geomorfológico das formas de relevo de mesoescala proglaciais. A variação frontal e de área total das geleiras foi estimada e mapeada com dados de imagens de satélite (Sentinel-2 de 2017 e WorldView-2 de 2014) e vetores de variação frontal de 1956, 1979, 1988 e 2000. Evidenciou-se um contínuo processo de retração nas geleiras Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower e Windy, com perda total de área de 33%, 25%, 37%, 71% e 30%, respectivamente, no período. A geleira Windy apresentou mudanças recentes em seu término de maré para terrestre, formando uma área proglacial com a exposição de formas de relevo deposicionais glaciais. Estimou-se um aumento das áreas livres de gelo de 6,3km² no período entre 1956-2017. Em resposta ao processo de retração glacial, há exposição de formas de relevo nos ambientes livres de gelo na área de estudo com a formação da rede de drenagem fluvioglacial e glaciolacustre e a formação de ambientes proglaciais com exposição de morainas laterais, frontais, latero-frontais e eskers. As áreas livres de gelo recentes são suscetíveis a processos de retrabalhamento por ação gravitacional, eólica e pluvial. Foram determinados três estágios de evolução do ambiente proglacial das geleiras associadas às feições geomorfológicas geradas em cada fase. Como mudança ambiental detectada está a sucessão de ambientes proglaciais, paraglaciais e periglaciais. / This dissertation aims to investigate the proglacial geomorphological evolution (Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower and Windy glaciers) in the western sector of Warszawa Ice Cap (62°12’0” S 58° 30’ 0” W), Admiralty Bay coast, King George Island, Antarctica between 1956 and 2017. Data obtained by remote sensors, such as Aster GDEM2, Sentinel-2 (2017) and WorldView-2 (2014) images, were applied in geomorphological mapping of the proglacial mesoscale landforms. Glacial retreat and fluctuations of glaciers areas were estimated (using Sentinel-2 images, acquired in 2017, WorldView-2 data, acquired in 2014, and outline data of the 1956, 1979, 1988 and 2000). The results evidenced the continuous retreat processes in period for Ecology, Sphinx, Baranowski, Tower and Windy glaciers, with of 33%, 25%, 37%, 71% and 30% of the area lost, respectively. The Windy glacier changed of outlet glacier for land terminus conditions in latest decades, with a recent proglacial environment development. In response to glacial retreat processes there is a glacial landforms exposition in new ice-free environments in the study area. Was recorded an increase of the 6.3km² in ice-free land areas between 1956 and 2017 in in the western sector of Warszawa Ice Cap. As response the retreat processes there are the development of the glacio-fluvial drainage network, glacio-lacustrine landforms and the formation of proglacial ice marginal environments with lateral moraines, lateral-frontal moraines, frontal moraines, eskers. Recent ice-free areas are susceptible to gravitational, wind and pluvial reworking process. Three stages of evolution of the proglacial environments of the glaciers associated with the geomorphological features formed in each phase and environmental changes in response the glacier retreat was determined. Was detected the succession of proglacial for paraglacial and periglacial environments as evidence of the environmental change.
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Linking glacial erosion and rock type via spectral roughness and spatial patterns of fractures on glaciated bedrock in the Teton Range, Wyoming, USADodson, Zoey January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Late Pleistocene Glacial Geology of the Hope-Waiau Valley System in North Canterbury, New ZealandRother, Henrik January 2006 (has links)
This thesis presents stratigraphic, sedimentological and geochronological results from valley fill and glacial moraines of the Hope-Waiau Valleys in North Canterbury, New Zealand. The findings demonstrate that a substantial portion of the modern valley fill comprises in-situ sedimentary sequences that were deposited during the penultimate glaciation (OIS 6), the last interglacial (OIS 5) and during the mid-late last glacial cycle (OIS 3/2). The sediments survived at low elevations in the valley floor despite overriding by later glacial advances. Sedimentologically, the fill indicates deposition in an ice marginal zone and consists of paraglacial/distal-proglacial aggradation gravels and ice-proximal/marginal-subglacial sediments. Deposition during glacial advance phases was characterized by the sedimentation of outwash gravels and small push moraines while glacial retreat phases are dominated by glaciolacustrine deposits which are frequently interbedded with debris flow diamictons. The overall depositional arrangement indicates that glacial retreat from the lower valley portion occurred via large scale ice stagnation. Results from infra-red stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating gives evidence for five large aggradation and degradation phases in the Hope-Waiau Valleys over the last 200 ka. Combined with surface exposure dating (SED) of moraines the geochronological results indicate that glacial advances during OIS 6 were substantially larger in both ice extent and ice volume than during OIS 4-2. The last glacial maximum (LGM) ice advance occurred prior to 20.5 ka and glacial retreat from extended ice positions began by ~18 ka BP. A late glacial re-advance (Lewis Pass advance) occurred at ~13 ka BP and is probably associated with a regional cooling event correlated to the Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR). The findings from the Hope-Waiau Valleys were integrated into a model for glaciations in the Southern Alps which uses data from a snow mass balance model to analyse the sensitivity of glacial accumulation to temperature forcing. Model results indicate that in the central hyperhumid sector of the Southern Alps ice would expand rapidly with minor cooling (2-4℃) suggesting that full glaciation could be generated with little thermal forcing. Some Quaternary glacial advances in the Southern Alps may have been triggered by regional climate phenomena (e.g. changes in ENSO mode) rather than requiring a thermal trigger from the Northern Hemisphere.
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Late Pleistocene Glacial Geology of the Hope-Waiau Valley System in North Canterbury, New ZealandRother, Henrik January 2006 (has links)
This thesis presents stratigraphic, sedimentological and geochronological results from valley fill and glacial moraines of the Hope-Waiau Valleys in North Canterbury, New Zealand. The findings demonstrate that a substantial portion of the modern valley fill comprises in-situ sedimentary sequences that were deposited during the penultimate glaciation (OIS 6), the last interglacial (OIS 5) and during the mid-late last glacial cycle (OIS 3/2). The sediments survived at low elevations in the valley floor despite overriding by later glacial advances. Sedimentologically, the fill indicates deposition in an ice marginal zone and consists of paraglacial/distal-proglacial aggradation gravels and ice-proximal/marginal-subglacial sediments. Deposition during glacial advance phases was characterized by the sedimentation of outwash gravels and small push moraines while glacial retreat phases are dominated by glaciolacustrine deposits which are frequently interbedded with debris flow diamictons. The overall depositional arrangement indicates that glacial retreat from the lower valley portion occurred via large scale ice stagnation. Results from infra-red stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating gives evidence for five large aggradation and degradation phases in the Hope-Waiau Valleys over the last 200 ka. Combined with surface exposure dating (SED) of moraines the geochronological results indicate that glacial advances during OIS 6 were substantially larger in both ice extent and ice volume than during OIS 4-2. The last glacial maximum (LGM) ice advance occurred prior to 20.5 ka and glacial retreat from extended ice positions began by ~18 ka BP. A late glacial re-advance (Lewis Pass advance) occurred at ~13 ka BP and is probably associated with a regional cooling event correlated to the Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR). The findings from the Hope-Waiau Valleys were integrated into a model for glaciations in the Southern Alps which uses data from a snow mass balance model to analyse the sensitivity of glacial accumulation to temperature forcing. Model results indicate that in the central hyperhumid sector of the Southern Alps ice would expand rapidly with minor cooling (2-4℃) suggesting that full glaciation could be generated with little thermal forcing. Some Quaternary glacial advances in the Southern Alps may have been triggered by regional climate phenomena (e.g. changes in ENSO mode) rather than requiring a thermal trigger from the Northern Hemisphere.
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Parallel Tunnel Channels: On the Stratigraphy and Formation of a New Variety of Tunnel Channel from the Huron-Erie LobeSodeman, Alexander D. January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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