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1.
  • Berntsson, Annika, et al. (author)
  • Late Holocene high precipitation events recorded in lake sediments and catchment geomorphology, Lake Vuoksjavratje, NW Sweden
  • 2015
  • In: Boreas. - : Wiley. - 0300-9483 .- 1502-3885. ; 44:4, s. 676-692
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In this paper, we show the potential of combining multi-proxy analysis of lake sediments with catchment geomorphology to better understand palaeoenvironmental changes. Previous studies have suggested that alpine lakes in N Sweden may be highly sensitive to variations in catchment erosion and precipitation, and that this sensitivity may influence ecologically based reconstructions of past temperature changes. We analysed lake sediments covering the last 5100 years from the alpine Lake Vuoksjavratje in NW Sweden in order to identify different erosional regimes in the lake catchment, sediment sources and lake sedimentary processes, which ultimately affect the palaeoecological record. The measured proxies include elemental geochemistry from XRF core scanning, grain size, sediment accumulation rates, fraction of terrestrial organic carbon and geomorphological mapping, supported by previously published chironomid and total organic carbon data. From the integrated results we identified time intervals when increased intensity of precipitation altered sedimentation and lake catchment erosional processes. The most prominent event occurred c. 2900 cal. a BP and is interpreted to be the result of excessive precipitation, possibly related to the climatic shift towards cooler and wetter conditions referred to as the 2.8 ka event.
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2.
  • Berntsson, Annika, 1979-, et al. (author)
  • Late Holocene high precipitation events recorded in lake sediments and catchment geomorphology, Lake Vuoksjávrátje, NW Sweden
  • Other publication (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • In this paper, we highlight the importance of combining multi-proxy analysis of lake sediments with associated catchment geomorphology to better understand the late Holocene palaeoenvironmental evolution in a high latitude Alpine lake in N Sweden. Previous studies have suggested that such lakes may be highly sensitive to variations in catchment erosion and variations in precipitation, and that this sensitivity may influence ecologically-based reconstructions of past temperature changes. Here we have analysed lake sediments covering the last 5100 years from Lake Vuoksjávrátje in NW Sweden to identify different erosional regimes in the lake catchment and to identify sediment sources and lake sedimentary processes, which ultimately affect the palaeoecological record. Methods that were used include XRF core scanning, grain size analysis and geomorphological mapping, supported by previously published chironomid, total organic carbon and carbon/nitrogen data. From the integrated results we identify time intervals when increased amounts/intensity of precipitation altered sedimentation and lake catchment erosional processes. The most prominent event in our record occurred between 3090 and 2750 cal. a BP and is interpreted to be the result of excessive precipitation in relation to the 2.8 ka event. By combining the multi-proxy analysis of a lake sediment core with a detailed catchment characterisation it is possible to reach a better understanding of the processes active within the lake catchment, the factors governing the erosional regimes and the way these are recorded in lake sediments. For future palaeoclimatological research based on lake sediments we recommend increasing the integration of catchment geomorphology, sedimentology and palaeoecology.
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3.
  • Blomdin, Robin, 1986-, et al. (author)
  • Glacial geomorphology of the Altai and Western Sayan Mountains, Central Asia
  • 2016
  • In: Journal of Maps. - : Informa UK Limited. - 1744-5647. ; 12:1, s. 123-136
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In this article, we present a map of the glacial geomorphology of the Altai andWestern Sayan Mountains, covering an area of almost 600,000 km2. Although numerous studies provide evidence for restricted Pleistocene glaciations in this area, others have hypothesized the past existence of an extensive ice sheet. To provide a framework for accurate glacial reconstructions of the Altai and Western Sayan Mountains, we present a map at a scale of 1:1,000,000 based on a mapping from 30 m resolution ASTER DEM and 15 m/30 mresolution Landsat ETM+ satellite imagery. Four landform classes have been mapped: marginal moraines, glacial lineations, hummocky terrain, and glacial valleys. Our mapping reveals an abundance of glacial erosional and depositional landforms. The distribution of these glacial landforms indicates that the Altai and Western Sayan Mountains have experienced predominantly alpine-style glaciations, with some small ice caps centred on the higher mountain peaks. Large marginal moraine complexes mark glacial advances in intermontane basins. By tracing the outer limits of present-day glaciers, glacial valleys, and moraines, we estimate that the past glacier coverage have totalled to 65,000 km2 (10.9% of the mapped area), whereas present-day glacier coverage totals only 1300 km2 (0.2% of the mapped area). This demonstrates the usefulness of remote sensing techniques for mapping the glacial geomorphology in remote mountain areas and for quantifying the past glacier dimensions. The glacial geomorphological map presented here will be used for further detailed reconstructions of the paleoglaciology and paleoclimate of the region.
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4.
  • Blomdin, Robin, 1986-, et al. (author)
  • Paleoglaciation on opposite flanks of the Ikh-Turgen Mountains, Central Asia : Importance of style of moraine deposition for 10-Be surface exposure dating
  • Other publication (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The ages of marginal moraines that record extensive glacier expansions across the Altai Mountains of Central Asia are poorly documented. We present 18 10Be exposure ages from moraines in valleys on opposite flanks of the Ikh-Turgen Mountains. On the eastern side, exposure ages from a latero-frontal moraine indicate deglaciation during MIS 3 (45.3±2.7 ka) and MIS 2 (22.8±3.5 ka). Corresponding exposure ages, from the western side, indicate a more complex story with large scatter (~14-53 ka). Owing to their close proximity, the paleoglaciers should have responded similarly to climate forcing, yet they exhibited a distinctly different behavior. We propose that differences in glacier dynamics caused differences in ice-marginal depositional environments, explaining the scatter in exposure ages on the western side. This study shows the importance of style of deposition in chronological studies of glacial landforms and demonstrates that certain moraine types can be difficult to use as paleoclimate proxies.
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5.
  • Blomdin, Robin, et al. (author)
  • Timing and dynamics of glaciation in the Ikh Turgen Mountains, Altai region, High Asia
  • 2018
  • In: Quaternary Geochronology. - : Elsevier BV. - 1871-1014 .- 1878-0350. ; 47, s. 54-71
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Spanning the northern sector of High Asia, the Altai region contains a rich landform record of glaciation. We report the extent, chronologies, and dynamics of two paleoglaciers on opposite flanks of the Ikh Turgen mountains (In Russian: Chikhacheva Range), straddling the border between Russia and Mongolia, using a combination of remote sensing-based glacial geomorphological mapping, 10Be surface exposure dating, and geomorphometric analysis. On the eastern side (Mongolia), the Turgen-Asgat paleoglacier, with its potential for developing a large accumulation area (∼257 km2), expanded 40 km down valley, and mean ages from a latero-frontal moraine indicate deglaciation during marine oxygen isotope stage (MIS) 3 (45.1 ± 1.8 ka, n = 4) and MIS 2 (22.8 ± 3.3 ka, n = 5). These minimum age constraints are consistent with other 10Be glacial chronologies and paleoclimate records from the region, which indicates glacier culmination during cold and wet conditions coinciding with MIS 3 (piedmont-style glaciation; inferred for a few sites across the region) and glacier culmination during cold and dry conditions coinciding with MIS 2 (mainly valley-style glaciation; inferred from several sites across the region). On the western side (Russia), the Boguty paleoglacier had a smaller accumulation area (∼222 km2), and advanced 30 km down valley across a low gradient forefield. Surface exposure ages from two moraine complexes on this side of the mountains exhibit wide scatter (∼14–53 ka, n = 8), making paleoclimate inferences and comparison to other proxies difficult. Ice surface profile reconstructions imply that the two paleoglaciers likely shared an ice divide. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.
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6.
  • Blomdin, Robin, et al. (author)
  • Timing of the deglaciation in Southern Patagonia : testing the applicability of k feldspar irsl
  • 2012
  • In: Quaternary Geochronology. - : Elsevier BV. - 1871-1014 .- 1878-0350. ; 10, s. 264-272
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The timing of the ice margin retreat of the Late Glacial Patagonian Ice Sheet (PIS) in southern Patagonia has been the object of discussion for many years. In order to resolve questions about the complex response of the PIS to past climate change, any geological interpretation and data modelling need evaluation against an absolute chronology. The aim of this project is to investigate the applicability of OSL dating to sediments from southern Patagonia; in particular, we examine the dating potential of K-feldspar IRSL signals. Samples were collected from landforms interpreted as being deposited during deglaciation of the PIS, with an expected age range of 17 and 22 ka, and from recently deposited sediment. We measure small aliquots and single grain distributions using an IR50 SAR protocol with IRSL stimulation at 50 degrees C following a preheat at 250 degrees C (held for 60 s). Uncertainties are assigned to our individual dose estimates based on the over-dispersion (OD) observed in laboratory gamma dose recovery experiments (22% for small aliquots and 18% for single grains). Then the possible effects of incomplete bleaching and differential fading are examined. For our natural samples we observe environmental ODs between 30 and 130% and mean residual doses between similar to 30 and 80 Gy. Minimum age models are used to identify the part of the dose population that is most likely to have been well-bleached and results from these models are compared. The models give ages that are consistent with each other; this may imply that they successfully identified the fully-bleached grains in the distributions, although there are some discrepancies between our small aliquot and single grain data. We observe large fading rates (on average 7.9 +/- 0.6%/decade for large aliquots) but nevertheless a comparison of our fading corrected ages with the expected age range shows that 2 out of 3 ages are consistent with geological interpretation and an established radiocarbon and cosmogenic nuclide chronology. We conclude that these investigations suggest that fading corrections can be based on laboratory average small aliquot/single grain fading rates. The third age is supported by an alternative geological interpretation, and the two ages consistent with the existing chronology imply that in the Strait of the Magellan the hills of the Brunswick peninsula (>70 m.a.s.l) were deglaciated at around 22 ka.
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7.
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8.
  • De Angelis, Hernán, 1974- (author)
  • Palaeo-ice streams in the north-eastern Laurentide Ice Sheet
  • 2007
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • This thesis presents a palaeoglaciological study aimed to determine the location, geometry and temporal evolution of palaeo-ice streams of the north-easternmost Laurentide Ice Sheet. The work was accomplished through the geomorphological interpretation of satellite imagery over 3.19 x 106 km2 of the Canadian Arctic, using a glaciological inversion scheme. Ice streams were active in this region during most of the time between the Last Glacial Maximum and the last deglaciation. A web of ice streams and inter-ice stream areas existed. Three major ice stream networks are identified: the M'Clintock Channel, Gulf of Boothia – Lancaster Sound and Hudson Strait. The M'Clintock Channel bears the most complex landform record, comprising three generations of palaeo-ice streams. Their location was weakly controlled by the subglacial topography and their geometry was determined by frozen-bed portions of the ice sheet, thus providing evidence for pure ice streams in the Laurentide Ice Sheet. In contrast, the more pronounced relief of the Gulf of Boothia – Lancaster Sound corridor supported topographically controlled ice streams. The landform record on emerged land along Hudson Strait is insufficient to support the existence of ice streams. It is therefore proposed that ice streams were constrained within the deep parts of the strait while flanked by cold-based zones on the margins. Small transient ice streams on Baffin and Prince of Wales islands drained local remnant ice caps during the collapse of the ice sheet. Analysis of the controls on the location and flow of palaeo-ice streams suggests that the interaction between the subglacial topography and thermal state of the substrate plays a more fundamental role than the geology. It is concluded that the behaviour of ice streams cannot be explained in terms of environmental controls alone, but the complex dynamics of ice stream shear margins and onset zones must be considered.
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9.
  • Glasser, Neil F., et al. (author)
  • Cosmogenic nuclide exposure ages for moraines in the Lago San Martin Valley, Argentina
  • 2011
  • In: Quaternary Research. - : Cambridge University Press (CUP). - 0033-5894 .- 1096-0287. ; 75:3, s. 636-646
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • At several times during the Quaternary, a major eastward-flowing outlet glacier of the former Patagonian Ice Sheet occupied the Lago San Martin Valley in Argentina (49 degrees S, 72 degrees W). We present a glacial chronology for the valley based on geomorphological mapping and cosmogenic nuclide ((10)Be) exposure ages (n = 10) of boulders on moraines and lake shorelines. There are five prominent moraine belts in the Lago San Martin Valley, associated with extensive sandar (glaciofluvial outwash plains) and former lake shorelines. Cosmogenic nuclide exposure ages for boulders on these moraines indicate that they formed at 14.3 +/- 1.7 ka, 22.4 +/- 2.3 ka, 34.4 +/- 3.4 ka to 37.6 +/- 3.4 ka (and possibly 60 +/- 3.5 ka), and 99 +/- 11 ka (1 sigma). These dated glacier advances differ from published chronologies from the Lago San Martin Valley based on (14)C age determinations from organic sediments and molluscs in meltwater channels directly in front of moraines or in kettleholes within end moraine ridges. The moraine boulder ages also point to possible pre-LGM glacial advances during the last glacial cycle and a key observation from our data is that the LGM glaciers were probably less extensive in the Lago San Martin Valley than previously thought.
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10.
  • Glasser, Neil F., et al. (author)
  • Glacial lake drainage in Patagonia (13-8 kyr) and response of the adjacent Pacific Ocean
  • 2016
  • In: Scientific Reports. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 2045-2322. ; 6
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Large freshwater lakes formed in North America and Europe during deglaciation following the Last Glacial Maximum. Rapid drainage of these lakes into the Oceans resulted in abrupt perturbations in climate, including the Younger Dryas and 8.2 kyr cooling events. In the mid-latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere major glacial lakes also formed and drained during deglaciation but little is known about the magnitude, organization and timing of these drainage events and their effect on regional climate. We use 16 new single-grain optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dates to define three stages of rapid glacial lake drainage in the Lago General Carrera/Lago Buenos Aires and Lago Cohrane/Pueyrredon basins of Patagonia and provide the first assessment of the effects of lake drainage on the Pacific Ocean. Lake drainage occurred between 13 and 8 kyr ago and was initially gradual eastward into the Atlantic, then subsequently reorganized westward into the Pacific as new drainage routes opened up during Patagonian Ice Sheet deglaciation. Coupled ocean-atmosphere model experiments using HadCM3 with an imposed freshwater surface hosing to simulate glacial lake drainage suggest that a negative salinity anomaly was advected south around Cape Horn, resulting in brief but significant impacts on coastal ocean vertical mixing and regional climate.
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  • Result 1-10 of 71
Type of publication
journal article (42)
conference paper (12)
doctoral thesis (7)
other publication (6)
reports (1)
research review (1)
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book chapter (1)
licentiate thesis (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (49)
other academic/artistic (22)
Author/Editor
Jansson, Krister (26)
Jansson, Krister N. (24)
Kleman, Johan (13)
Stroeven, Arjen (12)
Stroeven, Arjen P. (11)
Hättestrand, Clas (11)
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Glasser, Neil F. (8)
Harbor, Jonathan M. (8)
Heyman, Jakob (8)
Blomdin, Robin (6)
Harrison, Stephan (6)
Alm, Göran (5)
Margold, Martin (5)
Caffee, Marc W. (5)
Bjerklin, Krister (4)
Fabel, Derek (4)
Lindsten, Rune (4)
Gribenski, Natacha (4)
Petrakov, Dmitry A. (4)
Ivanov, Mikhail N. (4)
Goodfellow, Bradley (3)
Kylander, Malin E. (3)
Risberg, Jan (3)
Goodfellow, Bradley ... (3)
Berntsson, Annika (3)
Lifton, Nathaniel A. (3)
De Angelis, Hernán (3)
Hambrey, Michael J. (3)
Fredin, Ola (3)
Zhang, W. (2)
Zhang, Wei (2)
Svensson, Krister, 1 ... (2)
Olsson, Eva, 1960 (2)
De Vleeschouwer, Fra ... (2)
Lund, Henrik, 1975 (2)
Sanz-Velasco, Anke, ... (2)
Kaislahti Tillman, P ... (2)
Lifton, N. A. (2)
Caffee, M. W. (2)
Bertrand, Sebastien (2)
Blomdin, Robin, 1986 ... (2)
Rudoy, Alexei N. (2)
Walther, Michael (2)
Lukas, Sven (2)
Lund, Henrik (2)
Helmens, Karin (2)
Nafari, Alexandra, 1 ... (2)
Stroeven, Arjen, Pro ... (2)
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Glasser, N. F. (2)
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University
Stockholm University (55)
University of Gothenburg (7)
Jönköping University (5)
Chalmers University of Technology (4)
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Linköping University (2)
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Language
English (65)
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Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
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