Holocene environmental reconstruction from deltaic deposits in northeast Greenland
- 1 February 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Quaternary Science
- Vol. 17 (2) , 145-160
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.665
Abstract
Terraces of different age in the Zackenberg delta, located at 74°N in northeast Greenland, have provided the opportunity for an interdisciplinary approach to the investigation of Holocene glacial, periglacial, pedological, biological and archaeological conditions that existed during and after delta deposition.The raised Zackenberg delta accumulated mainly during the Holocene Climatic Optimum, starting slightly prior to 9500 cal. yr BP (30 m a.s.l.) and continued until at least 6300 cal. yr BP (0.5 m a.s.l.). Evidence of sea‐level change is based on conventional14C dates of shells from the marine delta bottomsets,14C AMS dating of macroscopic plant material from the foresets and of fluvial deposits. Arthropod and plant remains from 7960 cal. yr BP in the delta foresets include the oldest evidence of the arctic hare in Greenland and evidence of a rich herb flora slightly different from the modern flora.Empetrum nigrumandSalix herbacearemains indicate a summer temperature at least as high as today during delta deposition. Post‐depositional nivation activity, dated by luminescence, lichenometry and Schmidt Hammer measurements indicate mainly late Holocene activity, at least since 2900 yr BP, including Little Ice Age (LIA) avalanche activity. Pedological analyses of fossil podsols in the Zackenberg delta, including14C AMS dating of selected organic rich B‐horizons, show continued podsol development during the Holocene Climatic Optimum and into the subsequent colder period of the late Holocene, until 3000–2400 yr BP. A Neo‐Eskimo house ruin found on the lower part of the delta, presently being eroded by the sea, is dated toAD1800. It presumably was abandoned prior toAD1869, and suggests that some of the last Eskimos that lived in northeast Greenland might have occupied the Zackenberg delta. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
Funding Information
- Danish Science Research Councils.
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Paleoceanographic reconstructions of surface ocean conditions in the Greenland, Iceland and Norwegian seas through the last 14 ka based on diatomsPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Colonisation of Greenland by plants and animals after the last ice age: a reviewPolar Record, 1999
- PALEOCEANOGRAPHY OF THE LAST INTERGLACIAL/GLACIAL CYCLE IN THE POLAR NORTH ATLANTICQuaternary Science Reviews, 1998
- The Preboreal oscillation around the Nordic Seas: terrestrial and lacustrine responsesJournal of Quaternary Science, 1997
- Revision of the early Holocene lake sediment based chronology and event stratigraphy on Hochstetter Forland, NE GreenlandBoreas, 1994
- Evidence for translocations into the B horizon of a subarctic Podzol in GreenlandGeoderma, 1989
- First record of an interstadial insect from Greenland: Amara alpina (Paykull, 1790) (Coleoptera: Carabidae)Boreas, 1989
- Pedogenic Implications of a 14 C-Dated Paleopodzolic Soil at Haugabreen, Southern NorwayArctic and Alpine Research, 1984
- Major mechanisms in formation of spodic horizonsGeoderma, 1980
- Some Problems and Implications of 14 C Dates from a Podzol Buried beneath an End Moraine at Haugabreen, Southern NorwayGeografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, 1980