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Citation link: https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-00107004-10
00107004-1.pdf
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Investigating sedimentary records of deglacial outburst events from the Laurentian Channel Ice Stream


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Other Titles: Sedimentäre Befunde über deglaziale Schmelzwasserausbrüche aus dem Laurentischen Eisstrom
Authors: Leng, Wei  
Supervisor: von Dobeneck, Tilo
1. Expert: von Dobeneck, Tilo
Experts: Appel, Erwin  
Abstract: 
Sediments derived from the eastern Canadian Continental Margin preserved the whole records of deglacial meltwater discharges since the Wisconsinan when the entire margin was glaciated by the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Large volume of meltwater or iceberg release were created when the ice sheet began to landward shrink and retreat. Such discharges and calving events caused erosion of the bedrocks and delivered the terrestrial sediments to the adjoining shelf and fan system. Ice streams are believed to play a major role of Ice sheet movement. The Laurentian Channel Ice Stream (LCIS) and numerous canyons on the slopes are the main pathway for the sub-glacial meltwater discharge from Gulf of St. Lawrence. Thick reddish mud event layers deposited on the Laurentian Fan have been recognized as representing deposits of the major meltwater discharges between Heinrich Event 2 and 1. Those reddish sediments were sourced from Permo-Carboniferous redbeds and created by subglacial outburst floods events. However, the event chronology and scenarios are lacking understanding, the compositions and provenance of the event beds are still unknown and the correlation to the Laurentide Ice Sheet retreat history is also unclear. In the framework of this thesis, I investigate three new sediment cores (GeoB18514-2, 18515-1 and 18516-2) retrieved from the southwestern Grand Banks slope and stratigraphically link these cores to eastern Laurentian Fan core MD95-2029, further to the Scotia Margin cores 99036-008, 99036-028 and 99036-057. In addition, 80 estuarine and coastal reference samples among the Gulf of St. Lawrence area and Newfoundland were collected to represent all major source rock lithologies. High-resolution granulometric, rock magnetic, radiographic, colorimetric core logs and radiocarbon dates as well as the geochemical properties (major elements, trace elements) were produced for the cores. Subsequently the properties of the event beds samples are compared with the reference samples from the potential source areas. Such interdisciplinary approaches allow us to better understand the red mud event beds story.
Keywords: Quaternary; Sedimentology-marine cores; event stratigraphy; Environmental Magnetism; major element analysis; geochemical analysis; provenance study; Laurentian Channel Ice Stream; Gulf of St. Lawrence; Scotia Margin; subglacial outburst flood; hyperpycnal flow; plumite deposits; red mud event beds; source-to-sink model
Issue Date: 19-Dec-2018
Type: Dissertation
Secondary publication: no
URN: urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-00107004-10
Institution: Universität Bremen 
Faculty: Fachbereich 05: Geowissenschaften (FB 05) 
Appears in Collections:Dissertationen

  

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