Major tunnel valleys and sedimentation changes document extensive Early Pleistocene glaciations of the Barents Sea
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35260Date
2024-10-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Bellwald, Benjamin; Maharjan, Dwarika; Planke, Sverre; Winsborrow, Monica Caroline Mackay; Rydningen, Tom Arne; Alexandropoulou, Nikolitsa; Myklebust, ReidunAbstract
Sedimentary records of Early Pleistocene (~2.6–0.8 Ma) glaciations are sparse on shelves, yet trough
mouth fans on adjacent continental slopes provide a continuous record of ice-sheet and climate
development throughout the Quaternary. Here, we interpret high-quality 3D seismic reflection data
combined with borehole and chronostratigraphic information from a shelf-slope setting in the
southwestern Barents Sea to study meltwater and sediment inputs to the deep ocean, focusing on the
onset of Pleistocene glaciations. Sandy deposits were brought to the slopes of the high-latitude Bear
Island Fan by a preglacial contourite-turbidite system from ⁓2.6–2.4 Ma. Muddy glacigenic debris
flows document the first shelf-edge glaciation at ⁓2.4 Ma. From 1.78–0.78 Ma, muddy turbiditycurrent- and debris-flow-derived sediments were delivered from shelf to slope via six tunnel valleys
measuring up to 12 km in width and 200 m in depth. These tunnel valleys and associated downslope
deposits formed during the 41-kyr climate cycles of the Early Pleistocene, and evidence abundant
channelized, meltwater discharges from these glaciations. Following the mid-Pleistocene transition to
100-kyr cycles, a change in the style of glaciation is suggested by a change in landform and facies
associations consistent with a reduced meltwater contribution. This study shows that the NorwegianBarents shelf was extensively glaciated in the Early Pleistocene, with a first shelf-edge glaciation
from ~2.4 Ma.
Publisher
Springer NatureCitation
Bellwald B, Maharjan D, Planke S, Winsborrow M, Rydningen TA, Alexandropoulou N, Myklebust R. Major tunnel valleys and sedimentation changes document extensive Early Pleistocene glaciations of the Barents Sea. Communications Earth & Environment. 2024;5Metadata
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