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Submarine end moraines on the continental shelf off NE Greenland – Implications for Lateglacial dynamics

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Winkelmann,  Daniel
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Jokat,  Wilfried
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Jensen,  Laura       
0 Pre-GFZ, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences;

Schenke,  Hans-Werner
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Citation

Winkelmann, D., Jokat, W., Jensen, L., Schenke, H.-W. (2010): Submarine end moraines on the continental shelf off NE Greenland – Implications for Lateglacial dynamics. - Quaternary Science Reviews, 29, 9-10, 1069-1077.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.02.002


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz.de/pubman/item/item_5038746
Abstract
Favourable sea-ice conditions gave way to an acoustic survey offshore NE Greenland during RV Polarstern ARK-XXIV/3 leg in 2009. The acquired data set clearly depicts sediment ridges in an area of app. 18 × 9 km. The ridges are found in water depths between 270 and 350 m. The sediment ridges are 2.5–9 km long, 50–250 m wide and 5–25 m high. In profile, most of these ridges are characterized by steep slopes towards Northwest and gentle slopes towards Southeast. Their internal structure, imaged by parametric echo-sounding data, shows that they are positive sedimentation features rather than erosive remnant structures. Arcuate shape, joint orientation and position on a basal till are indicative for end moraines. Because they are positioned within the Westwind Trough on a basal till that extends further east, we consider these ridges end moraines of the Westwind ice stream reported by Evans et al. (2009), Marine geophysical evidence for former expansion and flow of the Greenland Ice Sheet across the north-east Greenland continental shelf. Journal of Quaternary Science (2008), doi: 10.1002/jqs.1231.). Based on our hydro-acoustic data, we interpret these end moraines to be formed by short-lived re-advances during an overall recession of the ice margin. However, they could also be deposited during halts of the grounding line (comparable to De Geer moraines) though their morphological characteristics are slightly different from most published De Geer moraines. The ages for the moraine deposition can be inferred from a thin sedimentary drape indicating timing between Lateglacial and early Holocene. This set of end moraines is direct evidence for a dynamic behaviour of the marine-based ice stream during the last deglaciation on the NE Greenland shelf.