Field guide for the NORDQUA excursion to Sunnmøre, western Norway, September 2014.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Field guide for the NORDQUA excursion to Sunnmøre, western Norway, September 2014."

Transcription

1 Field guide for the NORDQUA excursion to Sunnmøre, western Norway, September Eiliv Larsen 1, Jan Mangerud 2, and John Inge Svendsen 2. 1 The Geological Survey of Norway. Eiliv.Larsen@ngu.no Mobile phone: Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen. Jan.Mangerud@geo.uib.no, Mobile phone: John.Svendsen@geo.uib.no, Mobile phone:

2 Foreword This excursion guide was written before our pre-excursion planning trip. It will therefore probably be some minor changes in the program. Most of the older literature that we refer to in the guide can be down-loaded from Jan Mangeruds home page: If any of you have problems to obtain papers where one of us is author/co-author then do not hesitate to send us an with request. Program Day 1. Arrival at Ålesund airport, Vigra. Site 1: Skjonghelleren Cave. Only some 8-10 people can creep into Skjonghelleren at a time, so we will try to find some parallel activity. Site 2: Dimna bog. Coring. Vedde and Dimna ash beds. Stay overnight in Quality Hotel, Ulsteinvik. Day 2. Site 3: Mulevika on the westernmost shore of Nerlandsøy. Beach ridge at marine limit. Site 4. Frøystadmyra, Leinøy. Coring. Tsunami, sea-level changes. Site 4: Litlevatn, Gurskøy. Coring. Sea-level changes. Litlevatn was isolated during Late Allerød. Stay overnight in Best Western Hotel Baronen, Spjelkavik. Day 3. Site 5. Riksheim, Sykkylven. Sections in Younger Dryas local moraine. Site 6. Hundeidvik. Gravel pit in Younger Dryas sandur-delta. Stay overnight in Best Western Hotel Baronen, Spjelkavik. Day 4. We will see Younger Dryas moraines, blockfields in the mountains, in addition to the major geomorphology along the fjords on our way. Site 7. Skorgenes in Tresfjorden. Three superimposed ice marginal deltas. Departure from Ålesund or Vigra. 2

3 Fig. 1 An overview map. The red square shows the excursion area. The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) ice limit is marked along the continental shelf edge. Note that the YD ice margin in Sunnmøre is located near the fjord heads in contrast to around Bergen where the YD margin almost reached the open ocean. 3

4 Fig. 2. Overview map of the excursion area. 4

5 Skjonghelleren and the Ålesund interstadial Skjonghelleren is a cave located close to the Vigra (Ålesund) airport and will be the first locality we visit. The cave is the type locality for the Ålesund Interstadial (Larsen et al., 1987), the best dated pre-lgm interstadial in the Nordic countries. The cave is formed by sea waves during the Early Weichselian or before. Simplified there are two types of sediments (Fig. 4); 1) blocks deposited during ice-free periods and 2) laminated clay deposited when the opening was blocked by the Scandinavian Ice Sheet. Three pre-holocene block layers are described (Fig. 6) (Larsen et al., 1987); here we will concentrate on the youngest, the Ålesund interstadial bed. The Laschamp paleomagnetic excursion is identified in the clay bed below Ålesund, and the Mono Lake excursion in the bed above Ålesund (Fig. 10) (Larsen et al., 1987; Løvlie and Sandnes, 1987). These excursions are correlated with increased fluxes of cosmic-radiation produced isotopes in Greenland ice cores (Mangerud et al., 2003). The Ålesund interstadial is dated by more than 40 AMS 14 C dates (Figs 8 and 10) (Mangerud et al., 2010) from Skjonghelleren and Hamnsundhelleren a cave east of Skjonghelleren. Fig. 3. Map of Valderøya with Skjonghelleren marked with blue dot. 5

6 Fig. 4. The depositional environments and sediment succession in Skjonghelleren, from Mangerud et al. (2010). 6

7 Fig. 5. Upper panel: Longitudinal profile of Skjonghelleren. Note that the cave is >70 m long and that there is >20 m thick sediments in the cave. Lower panel: map of the cave. From (Larsen et al., 1987). 7

8 Fig. 6. The section and coring results from the outer part of the cave. From Larsen et al. (1987). During the excursion we will see Laminated clay F and the block on top. 8

9 Fig. 7. The section in the innermost part of the cave, that we will see during the excursion. From Larsen et al. (1987). 9

10 Fig. 8.Table of bones identified at an early stage From Larsen et al (1987). Presently > bones are picked from Ålesund interstadial beds in Skjongehelleren and in Hamnsundhelleren. 10

11 Fig. 9. The radiocarbon ages from Skjonghelleren, Hamnsundhelleren and shellbearing tills. From Mangerud et al. (2010). Fig. 10. Comparison betwen Greenland ice cores and Sunnmøre. Note that black curves and ages refer to the Middle Weichselian, whereas red refer to the Late Weichselian. From Mangerud et al. (2010). 11

12 Fig. 11. Correlation between the Ålesund and Greenland ice cores. From Mangerud et al. (2010). 12

13 Fig. 12. A glaciation curve for the entire Weichselian, where the events found in Sunnmøre are marked. From Mangerud et al. (2011). 13

14 Shellbearing tills The Ålesund interstadial was originally defined from radiocarbon dates from shell fragments in till (Mangerud et al., 1981; Mangerud et al., 1979). Such tills are only exposed in temporarily excavations for buildings, roads, etc. and we do yet not know if any exposure will be available. Later re-dating with AMS confirm that most of the sites are of Ålesund age (as defined in Skjonghelleren), whereas some sites pre-date the Laschamp and we therefore named that ice-free period for Austnes interstadial (Mangerud et al., 2010). Fig. 13. The excavated caves (red dots and names) and sites with shell-bearing tills (numbers). 1 - Rogne, 2 - Longva, 3 - Ullaholmen, 4 - Austnes, 5 Hildrestrand, 6 Gjøsundet, Vigra, 7 Synnes, Vigra, 8 Vikebukt, Vigra, 9 Dyb, Godøy, 10 Liaaen, Ålesund (that was the first site discovered), 11 Spjelkavik, Ålesund, 12 Eidsvik. 14

15 The Vedde and Dimna ash beds The discovery of the Vedde Ash and its correlation with Ash Zone 1 in the North Atlantic and ash beds in the Norwegian Sea (Kvamme et al., 1989; Mangerud et al., 1984) triggered a search for Vedde and other ashes in the north-west Europe, the surrounding seas and in Greenland ice cores. Vedde is presently found at a large number of sites (Lane et al., 2012) and is a key horizon for correlation between continental, marine and Greenland ice core sequences. We will see the Vedde Ash at several coring sites the first and second day. We searched for more ashes and discovered the Dimna Ash with identical composition as the rhyolitic component of the Vedde Ash (Koren et al., 2008; Lane et al., 2012). We will core the type locality, where the Vedde Ash also is much thicker than any other place in Norway - up to 48 cm thick. Fig. 14. Vedde Ash in the Ålesund area. After Mangerud et al (1984) Fig. 15. Stratigraphic position of the Vedde Ash in different settings and elevations above sea level. After Mangerud et al (1984) 15

16 Fig. 16. The distribution of the Vedde Ash from Greenland to Italy. From Lane et al (2012). 16

17 Fig. 17. Maps showing of the location and coring sites at Dimnamyra (-bog). From Koren et al (2008). Fig. 18. Cross section of Dimnamyra. From Koren et al. (2008). 17

18 Fig. 19. Stratigraphy in Dimnamyra. From Koren et al. (2008). Fig. 20. Ashes in Dimnamyra (-bog). From Koren et al. (2008). 18

19 Fig. 21. Left figure: Geochemistry of ash beds. Right figure: Late glacial ashes in NW Europe. From Koren et al (2008). Fig. 22. Trace element composition of the Vedde and Dimna ashes. From Lane et al (2012). 19

20 Fig. 23. Pollen diagram from Dimnamyra. From Krüger et al. (2011). 20

21 Relative sea-level fluctuations Shore lines and sea-level fluctuations will be the main theme for the second day. We have used the classical Nordic method utilizing isolation basins. This might be familiar for most participants, but we include a first figure explaining the principle. We include then a number of illustrations from the sites we will core. In the next section include some figures from a syntheses paper for sea-level changes for the entire Late Glacial and the Holocene and across a larger area. Note that these old papers use only un-calibrated C-14 years. Fig. 24. The principle of isolation basin method. From Svendsen and Mangerud (1987) 21

22 Fig. 25. Location map for the coring sites. From Svendsen and Mangerud (1990). Fig. 26. Map of Frøystadmyra. From Svendsen and Mangerud (1990). 22

23 Fig. 27. The stratigraphy in the studied basins as we described them before we discovered the Storegga tsunami. Note Mixed sediments in Skolemyra. A tsunami version is given in Fig. 34. Note the dashed line that connect the Vedde Ash between the columns. From Svendsen and Mangerud (1990). 23

24 Fig. 28. Cross section of Frøystadmyra I. From Svendsen and Mangerud (1990). Fig. 29. The original sea-level curve and the one revised after we discovered the Storegga tsunami. From Bondevik et al (1998). 24

25 The Storegga tsunami The very last day of field work for his Master thesis in 1983 John Inge Svendsen discovered a bed of marine sand and shell above the Tapes transgression level. He proposed that it possibly could be a deposit from a tsunami that the Storegga Slide could have released. However, because Jan Mangerud now had started a major research project on Svalbard, where John Inge followed to do his Dr. thesis, the tsunami hypothesis was not tested until Stein Bondevik started with his Dr. thesis ten years later. We, and other scientists, had earlier interpreted the tsunami deposits as the result of the Tapes transgression (relative sea-level rise). This had led to construction of a too fast, and some places too high Tapes transgression (Bondevik et al., 1998). We subsequently found that the Tapes very rarely (never?) had eroded sediments in basins that are some few meter deep, whereas the tsunami most often had eroded. Deposits from the Storegga tsunami are now found around the entire North Sea and also on Greenland (Bondevik et al., 2005a; Bondevik et al., 2005b; Bondevik et al., 1997a; Bondevik et al., 1997b). Fig. 30. The Storegga Slide and sites where Storegga tsunami deposits are described. From Bondevik et al (2005). 25

26 Fig. 31. How run-up for the tsunami is determined. From Bondevik et al (2005). 26

27 Fig. 32. Modeling of the tsunami. After Bondevik et al (2005). Fig.,33. Tsunami facies. From Bondevik et al (1997a). 27

28 Fig. 34. The Storegga tsunami deposits in Frøystadmyra and neighbouring sites. From Bondevik et al. (1997a) 28

29 A synthesis of sea-level changes. Fig. 35. An overview map showing the area we studued (Hatched) and the profile line for Fig. X. After Svendsen and Mangerud (1987). Fig. 36. The isobases and projection planes used. After Svendsen and Mangerud (1987). 29

30 Fig. 37. Shoreline diagram for Sunnmøre-Trøndelag. Note that ages are in uncalibrated C-14 years. After Svendsen and Mangerud (1987). 30

31 Fig. 38. Sea-level curves deduced from the shore-line diagram. After Svendsen and Mangerud (1987). 31

32 Fig. 39. Profiles across Scandinavia, indicating how shorelines should bend over the landmass. After Svendsen and Mangerud (1987). 32

33 Younger Dryas cirque moraines As seen from the map Fig. 1 the Younger Dryas ice sheet moraines are located near the head of the fjords. In the, often alpine type, mountains farther west there were numerous cirque glaciers during the Younger Dryas. Most of these local glaciers apparently survived the Allerød, although they probably were smaller than during the Younger Dryas (Larsen et al., 1998), whereas the wellstudied Kråkenes glacier was formed soon after the onset of the Younger Dryas (Larsen et al., 1984; Lohne et al., 2014; Mangerud et al., 1979). On day 3 we will visit the site Riksheim with an exposure in such a moraine and also some other sites in the vicinity of Riksheim. Fig. 40. The black lines are moraines, mainly cirque moraines. Note Ålesund in upper left corner. We will visit Sykkylvsfjorden, a tributary to Storfjorden in the right hand part of the map. From Follestad (1995) 33

34 Fig. 41. Maps of the cirque moraines at Riksheim and adjacent sites. From Larsen et al (1998). 34

35 Fig. 42. Profile from Riksheim. From Larsen et al (1998). Fig. 43. Glaciation relative to sea level at Riksheim. From Larsen et al (1998). 35

36 Fig. 44. Reconstructions of the develoment at Riksheim. From Larsen et al (1998). 36

37 Skorgenes two pre-lgm interstadials in superposition Skorgenes is a rare, if not unique site in Norway because the late-glacial marine limit delta directly overlies two earlier deglacial sequences separated by two basal tills (Larsen and Ward, 1992). Fig. 45. Location of Skorgenes. From Larsen and Ward (1992). 37

38 Fig. 46. Map of the Skorgens site. From Larsen and Ward (1992). 38

39 Fig. 47. Stratigraphy at Skorgenes. From Larsen and Ward (1992). 39

40 Fig. 48. Stratigraphy and fabric at Skorgenes. From Larsen and Ward (1992). 40

41 Fig. 49. Obtained OSL dates from Skorgenes and correlation with Skjonghelleren. From Larsen and Ward (1992). 41

42 In the lowest formation at Skorgenes there are some spectacular clastic dikes, interpreted as injection veins from the sole of the ice sheet into the underlying sediments (Larsen and Mangerud, 1992). They are some few cm in diameter and many meters long, mainly almost vertical, but sometimes horizontal for several meters. This part of the section is normally covered by sloped material, but we will attempt to find an operator with excavator to clean that part for our excursion. Fig. 50. Detail of a clastic dike at Skorgenes horizontal with a branch turning down. Note the small offset in the primary bedding. The scale is the top of a knife, so this vein is 2-3 cm thick. 42

43 Other topics As we travel around and see the landscape the excursion guides and any of the participants can comment on, ask questions, or start a provocative discussion about the observations. We will for example see the large, almost horizontal platform along the coast, named the Norwegian Strandflat, for which ages and processes are much discussed. Fjords and fjord formation is probably easier, or ---? We will from Vigra (see Gamlemsveten) and when crossing the mountains the last day, see extensive mountain block fields. Do they demonstrate ice free summits during glaciations? If we are not too unlucky with the weather we will several places have nice view of the alpine topography of the mountains Sunnmørsalpene. Did these narrow peaks escape glaciation, or did they survive under cold-based ice? 43

44 References. Bondevik, S., Løvholt, F., Harbitz, C., Mangerud, J., Dawson, A., Svendsen, J.I., 2005a. The Storegga Slide tsunami comparing field observations with numerical simulations. Marine and Petroleum Geology 22, Bondevik, S., Mangerud, J., Dawson, S., Dawson, A., Lohne, Ø., 2005b. Evidence for three North Sea tsunamis at the Shetland Islands between 8000 and 1500 years ago. Quaternary Science Reviews 24, Bondevik, S., Svendsen, J.I., Johnsen, G., Mangerud, J., Kaland, P.E., 1997a. The Storegga tsunami along the Norwegian coast, its age and runup. Boreas 26, Bondevik, S., Svendsen, J.I., Mangerud, J., 1997b. Tsunami sedimentary facies deposited by the Storegga tsunami in shallow marine basins and coastal lakes, western Norway. Sedimentology 44, Bondevik, S., Svendsen, J.I., Mangerud, J., Distinction between the Storegga tsunami and the Holocene marine transgression in coastal basin deposits of western Norway. Journal of Quaternary Science 13, Follestad, B.A., Møre og Romsdal Fylke - kvartærgeologisk kart 1 : Norges geologiske undersøkelse. Koren, J.H., Svendsen, J.I., Mangerud, J., Furnes, H., The Dimna Ash -- a C ka-old volcanic ash in Western Norway. Quaternary Science Reviews 27, Krüger, L.C., Paus, A., Svendsen, J.I., Bjune, A.E., Lateglacial vegetation and palaeoenvironment in W Norway, with new pollen data from the Sunnmøre region. Boreas 10, no-no. Kvamme, T., Mangerud, J., Furnes, H., Ruddiman, W., Geochemistry of Pleistocene ash zones in cores from the North Atlantic. Norsk Geologisk Tidsskrift 69, Lane, C.S., Blockley, S.P.E., Mangerud, J., Smith, V.C., Lohne, Ø.S., Tomlinson, E.L., Matthews, I.P., Lotter, A.F., Was the 12.1 ka Icelandic Vedde Ash one of a kind? Quaternary Science Reviews 33, Larsen, E., Attig, J.W., Rune Aa, A., Sønstegaard, E., Late-glacial cirque glaciation in parts of western Norway. Journal of Quaternary Science 13, Larsen, E., Eide, F., Longva, O., Mangerud, J., Allerød - Younger Dryas climatic inferences from cirque glaciers and vegetational development in the Nordfjord area, western Norway. Arctic and Alpine Research 16, Larsen, E., Gulliksen, S., Lauritzen, S.-E., Lie, R., Løvlie, R., Mangerud, J., Cave stratigraphy in western Norway; multiple Weichselian glaciations and interstadial vertebrate fauna. Boreas 16, Larsen, E., Mangerud, J., Subglacially formed clastic dikes. Svergies Geologiska Undersøkning, Ser. Ca 81, Larsen, E., Ward, B., Sedimentology and stratigraphy of two glacial-deglacial sequence of Skorgenes, western Norway. Norsk Geologisk Tidsskrift 72, Lohne, Ø.S., Mangerud, J., Birks, H.H., IntCal13 calibrated ages of the Vedde and Saksunarvatn ashes and the Younger Dryas boundaries from Kråkenes, western Norway. Journal of Quaternary Science 29, Løvlie, R., Sandnes, A., Paleomagnetic excursions recorded in mid-weichselian cave sediments from Skjonghelleren, Valderøy, W. Norway. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interior 45, Mangerud, J., Gulliksen, S., Larsen, E., C-dated fluctuations of the western flank of the Scandinavian Ice Sheet kyr BP compared with Bølling-Younger Dryas fluctuations and Dansgaard-Oeschger events in Greenland. Boreas 39, Mangerud, J., Gulliksen, S., Larsen, E., Longva, O., Miller, G.H., Sejrup, H.-P., Sønstegaard, E., A Middle Weichselian ice-free period in Western Norway: the Ålesund Interstadial. Boreas 10,

45 Mangerud, J., Gyllencreutz, R., Lohne, Ø., Svendsen, J.I., Glacial history of Norway, In: Ehlers, J., Gibbard, P., Hughes, P. (Eds.), Quaternary Glaciations - Extent and Chronology. Elsevier, Amsterdam. Mangerud, J., Larsen, E., Longva, O., Sønstegaard, E., Glacial history of western Norway 15,000-10,000 B P. Boreas 8, Mangerud, J., Lie, S.E., Furnes, H., Kristiansen, I.L., Lømo, L., A Younger Dryas ash bed in Western Norway, and its possible correlations with tephra in cores from the Norwegian Sea and the North Atlantic. Quaternary Research 21, Mangerud, J., Løvlie, R., Gulliksen, S., Hufthammer, A.-K., Larsen, E., Valen, V., Paleomagnetic correlations between Scandinavian Ice-Sheet fluctuations and Greenland Dansgaard-Oeschger Events, 45,000-25,000 yrs B.P. Quaternary Research 59, Svendsen, J.I., Mangerud, J., Late Weichselian and Holocene sea-level history for a crosssection of western Norway. Journal of Quaternary Science 2, Svendsen, J.I., Mangerud, J., Sea-level changes and pollen stratigraphy on the outer coast of Sunnmøre, western Norway. Norsk Geologisk Tidsskrift 70,

Relative sea level in inner Nordfjord at 8150 cal. a BP

Relative sea level in inner Nordfjord at 8150 cal. a BP Relative sea level in inner Nordfjord at 8150 cal. a BP Supporting information to Vasskog et al. Introduction The most precise way of determining past relative sea level in Scandinavia is considered to

More information

IODP Proposal Cover Sheet 915 -

IODP Proposal Cover Sheet 915 - IODP Proposal Cover Sheet 915 - Pre North Atlantic Fjord Sediment Archives Received for: 2017-04-03 Title Proponents Fjord sediment archives: assessing the recent (post LGM) millennial to sub-decadal scale

More information

Rapid Communication The marine 14 C age of the Vedde Ash Bed along the west coast of Norway

Rapid Communication The marine 14 C age of the Vedde Ash Bed along the west coast of Norway JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE (2001) 16 (1) 3 7 Copyright 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Rapid Communication The marine 14 C age of the Vedde Ash Bed along the west coast of Norway STEIN BONDEVIK 1, *, JAN

More information

The Storegga Slide tsunami comparing field observations with numerical simulations

The Storegga Slide tsunami comparing field observations with numerical simulations Marine and Petroleum Geology 22 (2005) 195 208 www.elsevier.com/locate/marpetgeo The Storegga Slide tsunami comparing field observations with numerical simulations Stein Bondevik a, *, Finn Løvholt b,

More information

Loess and dust. Jonathan A. Holmes Environmental Change Research Centre

Loess and dust. Jonathan A. Holmes Environmental Change Research Centre Loess and dust Jonathan A. Holmes Environmental Change Research Centre Why is dust important? Mineral dust is an important constituent of the solid load in Earth's atmosphere, the total atmospheric aerosol

More information

QUATERNARY AND GLACIAL GEOLOGY

QUATERNARY AND GLACIAL GEOLOGY QUATERNARY AND GLACIAL GEOLOGY JURGEN EHLERS Geologisches Landesamt, Germany Translated from Allgemeine und historische Quartdrgeologie English version by Philip L. Gibbard JOHN WILEY & SONS Chichester

More information

Lake Levels and Climate Change in Maine and Eastern North America during the last 12,000 years

Lake Levels and Climate Change in Maine and Eastern North America during the last 12,000 years Maine Geologic Facts and Localities December, 2000 Lake Levels and Climate Change in Maine and Eastern North America during the last 12,000 years Text by Robert A. Johnston, Department of Agriculture,

More information

Name. 4. The diagram below shows a soil profile formed in an area of granite bedrock. Four different soil horizons, A, B, C, and D, are shown.

Name. 4. The diagram below shows a soil profile formed in an area of granite bedrock. Four different soil horizons, A, B, C, and D, are shown. Name 1. In the cross section of the hill shown below, which rock units are probably most resistant to weathering? 4. The diagram below shows a soil profile formed in an area of granite bedrock. Four different

More information

How do glaciers form?

How do glaciers form? Glaciers What is a Glacier? A large mass of moving ice that exists year round is called a glacier. Glaciers are formed when snowfall exceeds snow melt year after year Snow and ice remain on the ground

More information

Ice Sheets and Late Quaternary Environmental Change

Ice Sheets and Late Quaternary Environmental Change Ice Sheets and Late Quaternary Environmental Change Martin J. Siegert Bristol Glaciology Centre, School of Geographical Sciences University of Bristol JOHN WILEY & SONS, LTD Chichester New York Weinheim

More information

2.2.7 Backbarrier flats

2.2.7 Backbarrier flats FIGURE 24. VERTICAL PHOTOGRAPH SHOWING THE DEVELOPMENT OF SMALL PARABOLIC DUNES FROM BLOWOUTS IN A LARGE RELICT FOREDUNE NORTHWEST OF HUNTER'S CREEK. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF CAR'T'ER HOLT HARVEY FORESTS

More information

Sedimentology and stratigraphy of two glacial-deglacial sequences at Skorgenes, western Norway

Sedimentology and stratigraphy of two glacial-deglacial sequences at Skorgenes, western Norway Sedimentology and stratigraphy of two glacial-deglacial sequences at Skorgenes, western Norway EILIV LARSEN & BRENT W ARD Larsen, E. & Ward, B.: Sedimentology and stratigraphy of two glacial-deglacial

More information

Younger Dryas cirque glaciers in western Spitsbergen: smaller than during the Little Ice Age

Younger Dryas cirque glaciers in western Spitsbergen: smaller than during the Little Ice Age Younger Dryas cirque glaciers in western Spitsbergen: smaller than during the Little Ice Age JAN MANGERUD AND JON Y. LANDVIK BOREAS Mangerud, J. & Landvik, J. Y. 2007 (July): Younger Dryas cirque glaciers

More information

Erosion and Deposition

Erosion and Deposition Erosion and Deposition Erosion Sediment natural forces move rock/soil from one place to another. gravity, water, wind, glaciers, waves are causes material moved by erosion Deposition when erosion lays

More information

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND SEDIMENTATION!

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND SEDIMENTATION! Sed and Strat EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND SEDIMENTATION! 2/27 Lecture 7- Exposure: Weathering and the Sediment Factory 3/04 Lecture 8 - Rivers and Landscapes 3/06 Lecture 9 - Waves (not Tides) 3/11 Lecture

More information

Supplemental Information for. Persistent intermediate water warming during cold stadials in the SE Nordic seas. during the last 65 kyr

Supplemental Information for. Persistent intermediate water warming during cold stadials in the SE Nordic seas. during the last 65 kyr GSA DATA REPOSITORY2014248 Supplemental Information for Persistent intermediate water warming during cold stadials in the SE Nordic seas during the last 65 kyr By Mohamed M. Ezat, Tine L. Rasmussen, Jeroen

More information

Landscape. Review Note Cards

Landscape. Review Note Cards Landscape Review Note Cards Last Ice Age Pleistocene Epoch that occurred about 22,000 Years ago Glacier A large, long lasting mass of ice which forms on land and moves downhill because of gravity. Continental

More information

Ice on Earth: An overview and examples on physical properties

Ice on Earth: An overview and examples on physical properties Ice on Earth: An overview and examples on physical properties - Ice on Earth during the Pleistocene - Present-day polar and temperate ice masses - Transformation of snow to ice - Mass balance, ice deformation,

More information

New master projects in physical geography spring Svein Olaf Dahl

New master projects in physical geography spring Svein Olaf Dahl New master projects in physical geography spring 2018 Svein Olaf Dahl Geographical extent of NW European ice sheets during the last glacial maximum (LGM), about 20 ka BP. Svartisen Renså/Rolla Etter Svendsen

More information

Lecture 21: Glaciers and Paleoclimate Read: Chapter 15 Homework due Thursday Nov. 12. What we ll learn today:! Learning Objectives (LO)

Lecture 21: Glaciers and Paleoclimate Read: Chapter 15 Homework due Thursday Nov. 12. What we ll learn today:! Learning Objectives (LO) Learning Objectives (LO) Lecture 21: Glaciers and Paleoclimate Read: Chapter 15 Homework due Thursday Nov. 12 What we ll learn today:! 1. 1. Glaciers and where they occur! 2. 2. Compare depositional and

More information

Supplementary Fig. 1. Locations of thinning transects and photos of example samples. Mt Suess/Gondola Ridge transects extended metres above

Supplementary Fig. 1. Locations of thinning transects and photos of example samples. Mt Suess/Gondola Ridge transects extended metres above Supplementary Fig. 1. Locations of thinning transects and photos of example samples. Mt Suess/Gondola Ridge transects extended 260 24 metres above the modern surface of Mackay Glacier, and included 16

More information

Objectives: Define Relative Age, Absolute Age

Objectives: Define Relative Age, Absolute Age S6E5. Students will investigate the scientific view of how the earth s surface is formed. c. Classify rocks by their process of formation. g. Describe how fossils show evidence of the changing surface

More information

Origins of the First Californians

Origins of the First Californians Setting the Stage for the Peopling of the Americas Origins of the First Californians John R. Johnson Anthropology 131CA Mal ta Peopling of Siberia was episodic between 35,000 and 15,000 years ago. Middle

More information

THE DEPOSITS OF TSUNAMIS WESLEY PESANTEZ, CATHERINE NIELD, COLIN WINTER

THE DEPOSITS OF TSUNAMIS WESLEY PESANTEZ, CATHERINE NIELD, COLIN WINTER THE DEPOSITS OF TSUNAMIS WESLEY PESANTEZ, CATHERINE NIELD, COLIN WINTER AN OVERVIEW OF OUR SEMINAR WHAT IS A TSUNAMI WHY STUDY TSUNAMIS PROPERTIES OF TSUNAMIS TSUNAMI HYDRODYNAMICS IDEALIZED DEPOSITS SEDIMENT

More information

Geology of the Hawaiian Islands

Geology of the Hawaiian Islands Geology of the Hawaiian Islands Class 12 19 February 2004 A B C D F 97 94 92 91 88 87 86 85 85 84 82 77 73 73 mean 66 64 60 69 60 57 51 29 Exam Scores Mean = 71 Median = 82/77 Any Questions? Sedimentary

More information

Welcome to ATMS 111 Global Warming.

Welcome to ATMS 111 Global Warming. Welcome to ATMS 111 Global Warming http://www.atmos.washington.edu/2010q1/111 Isotopic Evidence 16 O isotopes "light 18 O isotopes "heavy" Evaporation favors light Rain favors heavy Cloud above ice is

More information

The Marine Environment

The Marine Environment The Marine Environment SECTION 16.1 Shoreline Features In your textbook, read about erosional landforms, beaches, estuaries, longshore currents, and rip currents. For each statement below, write true or

More information

Neogene Uplift of The Barents Sea

Neogene Uplift of The Barents Sea Neogene Uplift of The Barents Sea W. Fjeldskaar A. Amantov Tectonor/UiS, Stavanger, Norway FORCE seminar April 4, 2013 The project (2010-2012) Funding companies Flat Objective The objective of the work

More information

CORRELATION OF CLIMATIC AND SOLAR VARIATIONS OVER THE PAST 500 YEARS AND PREDICTING GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGES FROM RECURRING CLIMATE CYCLES

CORRELATION OF CLIMATIC AND SOLAR VARIATIONS OVER THE PAST 500 YEARS AND PREDICTING GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGES FROM RECURRING CLIMATE CYCLES Easterbrook, D.J., 2008, Correlation of climatic and solar variations over the past 500 years and predicting global climate changes from recurring climate cycles: International Geological Congress, Oslo,

More information

Lecture 10 Glaciers and glaciation

Lecture 10 Glaciers and glaciation Lecture 10 Glaciers and glaciation Outline Importance of ice to people! Basics of glaciers formation, classification, mechanisms of movement Glacial landscapes erosion and deposition by glaciers and the

More information

We re living in the Ice Age!

We re living in the Ice Age! Chapter 18. Coping with the Weather: Causes and Consequences of Naturally Induce Climate Change 지구시스템의이해 We re living in the Ice Age! 1 Phanerozoic Climate 서늘해지고 더웠고 따뜻했고 3 Climate Rollercoaster 4 2 Time

More information

4. What type of glacier forms in a sloping valley between rock walls? a. firn glacier b. ice sheet c. cirque d. alpine glacier

4. What type of glacier forms in a sloping valley between rock walls? a. firn glacier b. ice sheet c. cirque d. alpine glacier Multiple Choice Questions 1. The term means the loss of snow and ice by evaporation and melting. a. sublimation b. ablation c. erosion d. abrasion 2. What condition must be met for a glacier to begin flowing

More information

3.13Glaciers past and present

3.13Glaciers past and present 3.13Glaciers past and present We start with a headline from The Scotsman newspaper that rocked Britain s scientific establishment on the morning of 7 October 1840: 3 Discovery of the Former Existence of

More information

Lab 7: Sedimentary Structures

Lab 7: Sedimentary Structures Name: Lab 7: Sedimentary Structures Sedimentary rocks account for a negligibly small fraction of Earth s mass, yet they are commonly encountered because the processes that form them are ubiquitous in the

More information

GSA Data Repository

GSA Data Repository GSA Data Repository 2014159 Manuscript Title: Asynchronous response of marine-terminating outlet glaciers during deglaciation of the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet Authors: Stokes et al. 1. Supplementary Methods:

More information

SAMPLE PAGE. pulses. The Ice Age By: Sue Peterson

SAMPLE PAGE. pulses. The Ice Age By: Sue Peterson Page 61 Objective sight words (pulses, intermittent, isotopes, chronicle, methane, tectonic plates, volcanism, configurations, land-locked, erratic); concepts (geological evidence and specific terminology

More information

Page 1 of 9 Name: Base your answer to the question on the diagram below. The arrows show the direction in which sediment is being transported along the shoreline. A barrier beach has formed, creating a

More information

High Pre-Late Weichselian sea-formed caves and other marine features on the Møre-Romsdal coast, West Norway

High Pre-Late Weichselian sea-formed caves and other marine features on the Møre-Romsdal coast, West Norway High Pre-Late Weichselian sea-formed caves and other marine features on the Møre-Romsdal coast, West Norway HANS HOLTEDAHL Holtedahl, H.: High Pre-Late Weichselian sea-formed caves and other marine features

More information

Chapter 2. Wearing Down Landforms: Rivers and Ice. Physical Weathering

Chapter 2. Wearing Down Landforms: Rivers and Ice. Physical Weathering Chapter 2 Wearing Down Landforms: Rivers and Ice Physical Weathering Weathering vs. Erosion Weathering is the breakdown of rock and minerals. Erosion is a two fold process that starts with 1) breakdown

More information

The Marine Environment

The Marine Environment The Marine Environment SECTION 16.1 Shoreline Features In your textbook, read about erosional landforms, beaches, estuaries, longshore currents, and rip currents. For each statement below, write or. 1.

More information

Iceberg Plough Marks in the Vicinity of the Norwegian Trough

Iceberg Plough Marks in the Vicinity of the Norwegian Trough Iceberg Plough Marks in the Vicinity of the Norwegian Trough ROBERT H. BELDERSON & JOHN B. WILSON Belderson, R. H. & Wilson, J. B.: Iceberg plough marks in the vicinity of the Norwegian Trough. Norsk Geologisk

More information

ATOC OUR CHANGING ENVIRONMENT

ATOC OUR CHANGING ENVIRONMENT ATOC 1060-002 OUR CHANGING ENVIRONMENT Class 22 (Chp 15, Chp 14 Pages 288-290) Objectives of Today s Class Chp 15 Global Warming, Part 1: Recent and Future Climate: Recent climate: The Holocene Climate

More information

Section 7. Reading the Geologic History of Your Community. What Do You See? Think About It. Investigate. Learning Outcomes

Section 7. Reading the Geologic History of Your Community. What Do You See? Think About It. Investigate. Learning Outcomes Chapter 3 Minerals, Rocks, and Structures Section 7 Reading the Geologic History of Your Community What Do You See? Learning Outcomes In this section, you will Goals Text Learning Outcomes In this section,

More information

Bell Ringer. Are soil and dirt the same material? In your explanation be sure to talk about plants.

Bell Ringer. Are soil and dirt the same material? In your explanation be sure to talk about plants. Bell Ringer Are soil and dirt the same material? In your explanation be sure to talk about plants. 5.3 Mass Movements Triggers of Mass Movements The transfer of rock and soil downslope due to gravity is

More information

/ Past and Present Climate

/ Past and Present Climate MIT OpenCourseWare http://ocw.mit.edu 12.842 / 12.301 Past and Present Climate Fall 2008 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms. Ice Sheet Paleoclimatology

More information

Ocean Basins, Bathymetry and Sea Levels

Ocean Basins, Bathymetry and Sea Levels Ocean Basins, Bathymetry and Sea Levels Chapter 4 Please read chapter 5: sediments for next class and start chapter 6 on seawater for Thursday Basic concepts in Chapter 4 Bathymetry the measurement of

More information

Lecture Outlines PowerPoint. Chapter 6 Earth Science 11e Tarbuck/Lutgens

Lecture Outlines PowerPoint. Chapter 6 Earth Science 11e Tarbuck/Lutgens Lecture Outlines PowerPoint Chapter 6 Earth Science 11e Tarbuck/Lutgens 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors

More information

Calendar year age estimates of Allerød Younger Dryas sea-level oscillations at Os, western Norway

Calendar year age estimates of Allerød Younger Dryas sea-level oscillations at Os, western Norway Calendar year age estimates of Allerød Younger Dryas sea-level oscillations at Os, western Norway ØYSTEIN S. LOHNE,1,2* STEIN BONDEVIK,3 JAN MANGERUD1,2 and HANS SCHRADER1 1 Department of Earth Science,

More information

Chapter 5: Glaciers and Deserts

Chapter 5: Glaciers and Deserts I. Glaciers and Glaciation Chapter 5: Glaciers and Deserts A. A thick mass of ice that forms over land from the compaction and recrystallization of snow and shows evidence of past or present flow B. Types

More information

TAKE HOME EXAM 8R - Geology

TAKE HOME EXAM 8R - Geology Name Period Date TAKE HOME EXAM 8R - Geology PART 1 - Multiple Choice 1. A volcanic cone made up of alternating layers of lava and rock particles is a cone. a. cinder b. lava c. shield d. composite 2.

More information

Ice Sheets and Sea Level -- Concerns at the Coast (Teachers Guide)

Ice Sheets and Sea Level -- Concerns at the Coast (Teachers Guide) Ice Sheets and Sea Level -- Concerns at the Coast (Teachers Guide) Roughly 153 million Americans (~53% of the US population) live in coastal counties. World wide some 3 billion people live within 200 km

More information

Chapter 15 Millennial Oscillations in Climate

Chapter 15 Millennial Oscillations in Climate Chapter 15 Millennial Oscillations in Climate This chapter includes millennial oscillations during glaciations, millennial oscillations during the last 8000 years, causes of millennial-scale oscillations,

More information

EROSION AND DEPOSITION

EROSION AND DEPOSITION CHAPTER 8 EROSION AND DEPOSITION SECTION 8 1 Changing Earth s Surface (pages 252-255) This section explains how sediment is carried away and deposited elsewhere to wear down and build up Earth s surface.

More information

Ice Cap Glaciers in the Arctic Region. John Evans Glacier, Ellesmere Island (Robert Bingham, U. Aberdeen)

Ice Cap Glaciers in the Arctic Region. John Evans Glacier, Ellesmere Island (Robert Bingham, U. Aberdeen) Ice Cap Glaciers in the Arctic Region John Evans Glacier, Ellesmere Island (Robert Bingham, U. Aberdeen) Iceland Svalbard Ellesmere and Baffin Islands Severny and Anzhu Islands Topics: Temperate vs non-temperate

More information

Evidence for distribution and thickness of Athens Sub-episode and older sediments in Ottawa County, Michigan

Evidence for distribution and thickness of Athens Sub-episode and older sediments in Ottawa County, Michigan Evidence for distribution and thickness of Athens Sub-episode and older sediments in Ottawa County, Michigan Patrick M. Colgan Department of Geology Grand Valley State University With thanks to Al Kehew

More information

depression above scarp scarp

depression above scarp scarp 1 LAB 1: FIELD TRIP TO McKINLEYVILLE AND MOUTH OF THE MAD RIVER OBJECTIVES: a. to look at geomorphic and geologic evidence for large scale thrust-faulting of young sediments in the Humboldt Bay region

More information

Glacial processes and landforms NGEA01, 2014

Glacial processes and landforms NGEA01, 2014 Glacial processes and landforms NGEA01, 2014 Cecilia Akselsson Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science Lund University Geomorphological processes and landforms all over the world Periglacial

More information

Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE

Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Tarbuck Lutgens Chapter 7 Glaciers, Desert, and Wind 7.1 Glaciers Types of Glaciers A glacier is a thick ice mass that forms above the snowline over hundreds or thousands of

More information

Directed Reading. Section: The Water Planet. surface is called the a. Earth s ocean. b. Pacific Ocean. c. salt-water ocean. d. global ocean.

Directed Reading. Section: The Water Planet. surface is called the a. Earth s ocean. b. Pacific Ocean. c. salt-water ocean. d. global ocean. Skills Worksheet Directed Reading Section: The Water Planet 1. The body of salt water covering nearly three-quarters of the Earth s surface is called the a. Earth s ocean. b. Pacific Ocean. c. salt-water

More information

Questions and Topics

Questions and Topics Plate Tectonics and Continental Drift Questions and Topics 1. What are the theories of Plate Tectonics and Continental Drift? 2. What is the evidence that Continents move? 3. What are the forces that

More information

Reading Material. See class website. Sediments, from Oceanography M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall

Reading Material. See class website. Sediments, from Oceanography M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall Reading Material See class website Sediments, from Oceanography M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall Materials filling ocean basins Dissolved chemicals especially from rivers and mid-ocean ridges (volcanic eruptions)

More information

Ice sheet limits in Norway and on the Norwegian continental shelf

Ice sheet limits in Norway and on the Norwegian continental shelf Ice sheet limits in Norway and on the Norwegian continental shelf University of Bergen, Department of Geology, Allégt. 41, N-5007 Bergen, Norway Jan.Mangerud@geol.uib.no Introduction Ice sheets and other

More information

Time of major advances (AD) Sigma negative. Arctic Spitsbergen Many 79.00N Lichen (11) Werner 1990

Time of major advances (AD) Sigma negative. Arctic Spitsbergen Many 79.00N Lichen (11) Werner 1990 Table S1. A Little Ice Age glacier inventory for the North Atlantic sector. The Little Ice Age glacier inventory listed below contains information on the glaciers used in Figure 2. The geographical locations

More information

Scientific environment

Scientific environment Late Weichselian relative sea-level changes and glacial history in Hordaland, Western Norway Øystein S. Lohne Dissertation for the degree philosophiae doctor (PhD) at the University of Bergen December

More information

UNIT 3 GEOLOGY VOCABULARY FLASHCARDS THESE KEY VOCABULARY WORDS AND PHRASES APPEAR ON THE UNIT 3 CBA

UNIT 3 GEOLOGY VOCABULARY FLASHCARDS THESE KEY VOCABULARY WORDS AND PHRASES APPEAR ON THE UNIT 3 CBA UNIT 3 GEOLOGY VOCABULARY FLASHCARDS THESE KEY VOCABULARY WORDS AND PHRASES APPEAR ON THE UNIT 3 CBA A map that shows Earth s Topographic Map surface topography, which is Earth s shape and features Contour

More information

What is a Glacier? Types of Glaciers

What is a Glacier? Types of Glaciers Alpine & Continental Glaciers Glacial Mass Balance Glacial Ice Formation Glacial Movement & Erosion Erosional and Depositional Landforms The Pleistocene Epoch Geomorphology of SW Manitoba Chapter 17 1

More information

Question #1: What are some ways that you think the climate may have changed in the area where you live over the past million years?

Question #1: What are some ways that you think the climate may have changed in the area where you live over the past million years? Reading 5.2 Environmental Change Think about the area where you live. You may see changes in the landscape in that area over a year. Some of those changes are weather related. Others are due to how the

More information

THE RELATION OF GREAT BASIN LATE QUATERNARY HYDROLOGIC AND CRYOLOGIC VARIABILITY TO NORTH ATLANTIC CLIMATE OSCILLATIONS

THE RELATION OF GREAT BASIN LATE QUATERNARY HYDROLOGIC AND CRYOLOGIC VARIABILITY TO NORTH ATLANTIC CLIMATE OSCILLATIONS THE RELATION OF GREAT BASIN LATE QUATERNARY HYDROLOGIC AND CRYOLOGIC VARIABILITY TO NORTH ATLANTIC CLIMATE OSCILLATIONS L. Benson a, R. Spencer b, D. Rhode c, L. Louderback d, R. Rye e a U. S. Geological

More information

Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 2

Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 2 Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 2 Create a mind map with the driving question, Why are Oceans Important? Remember: Why are oceans so important? Why are oceans so important? Primary water source

More information

LANDFORM REGIONS IN CANADA. Classroom Notes and Descriptions

LANDFORM REGIONS IN CANADA. Classroom Notes and Descriptions LANDFORM REGIONS IN CANADA Classroom Notes and Descriptions Landform Regions in Canada There are eight distinct landforms in Canada: Western Cordillera Region Interior Plains Canadian Shield Hudson Bay

More information

2/23/2009. Visualizing Earth Science. Chapter Overview. Deserts and Drylands. Glaciers and Ice Sheets

2/23/2009. Visualizing Earth Science. Chapter Overview. Deserts and Drylands. Glaciers and Ice Sheets Visualizing Earth Science By Z. Merali and B. F. Skinner Chapter 6 Deserts, Glaciers and Ice Sheets Chapter Overview Deserts and Drylands Glaciers and Ice Sheets Deserts Geography Categorization of deserts

More information

THE ACTION OF GLACIERS

THE ACTION OF GLACIERS Surface processes THE ACTION OF GLACIERS Glaciers are enormous masses of ice which are formed due to accumulation, compaction and re-crystallisation of the snow deposited in very cold regions (the majority

More information

Physical Geography A Living Planet

Physical Geography A Living Planet Physical Geography A Living Planet The geography and structure of the earth are continually being changed by internal forces, like plate tectonics, and external forces, like the weather. Iguaçu Falls at

More information

Moosehead Lake and the Tale of Two Rivers

Moosehead Lake and the Tale of Two Rivers Maine Geologic Facts and Localities June, 2005 45 o 53 5.09 N, 69 o 42 14.54 W Text by Kelley, A.R.; Kelley, J.T.; Belknap, D.F.; and Gontz, A.M. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Maine, Orono,

More information

Rockall Plateau. OCN 201: Shelf Sediments

Rockall Plateau. OCN 201: Shelf Sediments Rockall Plateau OCN 201: Shelf Sediments Classification by Size Classification by Mode of Formation Detrital sediments Transported and deposited as particles Derived from weathering of pre-existing rocks

More information

Listing of Sessions per INQUA Commission

Listing of Sessions per INQUA Commission Listing of Sessions per INQUA Commission Coastal and Marine Processes Arctic landscape evolution and long-term coastal change (Poster only) Back to the future: Submerged shorelines on the shelf as tools

More information

discussion of North America s physical features, including its landforms and bodies of

discussion of North America s physical features, including its landforms and bodies of Chapter 7 Natural Environments of North America Chapter 7 focuses on the natural environments of North America. The chapter opens with a discussion of North America s physical features, including its landforms

More information

Landscape evolution. An Anthropic landscape is the landscape modified by humans for their activities and life

Landscape evolution. An Anthropic landscape is the landscape modified by humans for their activities and life Landforms Landscape evolution A Natural landscape is the original landscape that exists before it is acted upon by human culture. An Anthropic landscape is the landscape modified by humans for their activities

More information

The Montauk Peninsula: Data and Preliminary Interpretations of the Ditch Plains Area Introduction

The Montauk Peninsula: Data and Preliminary Interpretations of the Ditch Plains Area Introduction The Montauk Peninsula: Data and Preliminary Interpretations of the Ditch Plains Area John A. Black GSI Patchogue, New York R.S. Welch Suffolk Community College Selden, New York Introduction Sirkin, (1982)

More information

Erosional Features. What processes shaped this landscape?

Erosional Features. What processes shaped this landscape? Have you ever looked at the land around you and wondered what processes shaped what you see? Perhaps you see mountains, valleys, rivers, or canyons. Do you know how long these geologic features have been

More information

Chapter 2. Denudation: Rivers and Ice

Chapter 2. Denudation: Rivers and Ice Chapter 2. Denudation: Rivers and Ice DENUDATION: process that lowers level of land - caused by rivers, glaciers, waves & wind - involves processes of WEATHERING & EROSION Weathering Def: breakdown of

More information

Geosphere Final Exam Study Guide

Geosphere Final Exam Study Guide Geosphere Final Exam Study Guide Chapter 1 Intro to Earth Systems 1. Name and describe Earth s 4 major spheres Geosphere-- nonliving, mostly solid rock divided into crust, mantle, and core Atmosphere a

More information

Name: Mid-Year Review #2 SAR

Name: Mid-Year Review #2 SAR Name: Mid-Year Review #2 SAR Base your answers to questions 1 through 3 on on the diagram below, which shows laboratory materials used for an investigation of the effects of sediment size on permeability,

More information

EROSIONAL FEATURES. reflect

EROSIONAL FEATURES. reflect reflect Have you ever looked at the land around you and wondered what processes shaped what you see? Perhaps you see mountains, valleys, rivers, or canyons. Do you know how long these geologic features

More information

This graph best represents the elements of the Earth's A) lithosphere B) hydrosphere C) troposphere D) stratosphere

This graph best represents the elements of the Earth's A) lithosphere B) hydrosphere C) troposphere D) stratosphere 1. Surface ocean currents resulting from the prevailing winds over the oceans illustrate a transfer of energy from A) lithosphere to atmosphere B) hydrosphere to lithosphere C) atmosphere to hydrosphere

More information

New Radiocarbon Dates for the Vedde Ash and the Saksunarvatn Ash from Western Norway

New Radiocarbon Dates for the Vedde Ash and the Saksunarvatn Ash from Western Norway QUATERNARY RESEARCH 45, 119 127 (1996) ARTICLE NO. 0014 New Radiocarbon Dates for the Vedde Ash and the Saksunarvatn Ash from Western Norway HILARY H. BIRKS Botanical Institute, University of Bergen, Allégaten

More information

Glacial Geology of Moose Point State Park, ME

Glacial Geology of Moose Point State Park, ME Geologic Site of the Month May, 2013 Glacial Geology of Moose Point State Park, Maine 44 o 25 59.18"N, 68 o 56 37.11"W Text and photos by Woodrow B. Thompson, Department of Agriculture, Conservation &

More information

Chapter 3 Erosion and Deposition. The Big Question:

Chapter 3 Erosion and Deposition. The Big Question: Chapter 3 Erosion and Deposition The Big Question: 1 Design a way to represent and describe the 4 types of mass movement. You may use pictures, diagrams, list, web, chart, etc 2 Chapter 3: Erosion and

More information

Sedimentary Basins. Gerhard Einsele. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York London Paris Tokyo Hong Kong Barcelona Budapest

Sedimentary Basins. Gerhard Einsele. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York London Paris Tokyo Hong Kong Barcelona Budapest Gerhard Einsele Sedimentary Basins Evolution, Facies, and Sediment Budget With 269 Figures Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York London Paris Tokyo Hong Kong Barcelona Budapest Contents Part I Types

More information

ARE YOU READY TO THINK? Look at the first slide THINK PAIR SHARE!

ARE YOU READY TO THINK? Look at the first slide THINK PAIR SHARE! ARE YOU READY TO THINK? Look at the first slide THINK PAIR SHARE! WHAT PROMINENT FEATURE CAN YOU IDENTIFY IN THIS PICTURE? What do you think the different colors represent? Who might find such a picture

More information

ON THE EVOLUTION OF A HOLOCENE BARRIER COAST

ON THE EVOLUTION OF A HOLOCENE BARRIER COAST ON THE EVOLUTION OF A HOLOCENE BARRIER COAST Response to sea-level change and sediment supply DANCORE Seminar 2014 COADAPT - Danish Coasts and Climate Adaptation Flooding Risk and Coastal Protection Mikkel

More information

The Sea Floor. Chapter 2

The Sea Floor. Chapter 2 The Sea Floor Chapter 2 Geography of the Ocean Basins World ocean is the predominant feature on the Earth in total area Northern Hemisphere = 61% of the total area is ocean. Southern Hemisphere = about

More information

THE QUATERNARY GEOLOGY OF NEWARK BAY AND KILL VAN KULL CHANNEL, NEW YORK AND NEW JERSEY. and

THE QUATERNARY GEOLOGY OF NEWARK BAY AND KILL VAN KULL CHANNEL, NEW YORK AND NEW JERSEY. and THE QUATERNARY GEOLOGY OF NEWARK BAY AND KILL VAN KULL CHANNEL, NEW YORK AND NEW JERSEY Stephanie Beda, W. Bruce Ward, William Murphy, Robert Fleming, Gary Fleming, Beckett Boyd Earthworks LLC 27 Glen

More information

Ch 17 Plate Tectonics Big Idea: Most geologic activity occurs at the boundaries between plates.

Ch 17 Plate Tectonics Big Idea: Most geologic activity occurs at the boundaries between plates. Ch 17 Plate Tectonics Big Idea: Most geologic activity occurs at the boundaries between plates. 17.1 Drifting Continents 17.2 Seafloor Spreading 17.3 Plate Boundaries 17.4 Causes of Plate Motions Learning

More information

SAMPLE QUESTIONS FOR GEOLOGY 103, TEST 1

SAMPLE QUESTIONS FOR GEOLOGY 103, TEST 1 SAMPLE QUESTIONS FOR GEOLOGY 103, TEST 1 The correct answers are listed at the bottom (no peeking!). These questions are to give you an idea of the type of questions that will be asked. They are not a

More information

A) B) C) D) 4. Which diagram below best represents the pattern of magnetic orientation in the seafloor on the west (left) side of the ocean ridge?

A) B) C) D) 4. Which diagram below best represents the pattern of magnetic orientation in the seafloor on the west (left) side of the ocean ridge? 1. Crustal formation, which may cause the widening of an ocean, is most likely occurring at the boundary between the A) African Plate and the Eurasian Plate B) Pacific Plate and the Philippine Plate C)

More information

1/6/ th Grade Earth s Surface. Chapter 3: Erosion and Deposition. Lesson 1 (Mass Movement)

1/6/ th Grade Earth s Surface. Chapter 3: Erosion and Deposition. Lesson 1 (Mass Movement) Lesson 1 (Mass Movement) 7 th Grade Earth s Surface Chapter 3: Erosion and Deposition Weathering the chemical and physical processes that break down rock at Earth s surface Mechanical weathering when rock

More information

The Geology of Sebago Lake State Park

The Geology of Sebago Lake State Park Maine Geologic Facts and Localities September, 2002 43 55 17.46 N, 70 34 13.07 W Text by Robert Johnston, Department of Agriculture, Conservation & Forestry 1 Map by Robert Johnston Introduction Sebago

More information

INVESTIGATING AND UNDERSTANDING THE GROUND WHY BOTHER?

INVESTIGATING AND UNDERSTANDING THE GROUND WHY BOTHER? INVESTIGATING AND UNDERSTANDING THE GROUND WHY BOTHER? Dr Jacqueline Skipper Geotechnical Consulting Group WHAT IS UNDERSTANDING THE GROUND? Site Good enough ground model for successful project construction

More information

Drifting Continents and Spreading Seas. The Road To Plate Tectonics

Drifting Continents and Spreading Seas. The Road To Plate Tectonics Drifting Continents and Spreading Seas The Road To Plate Tectonics Alfred Wegener and the Continental Drift hypothesis: Up until the early 1900s, long-held tradition in the earth sciences stated that continents

More information