Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1990, Page 93

Jökull - 01.12.1990, Page 93
50" 40' 30" 20" 10’ 0" Figure 4. Retreat positions of the North Atlantic polar front from the glacial maximum position 18.000 yr ago t° the modem interglacial location after 6000 yr B.R (from Ruddiman and Mclntyre, 1981). —Breytingar a stöðu heimskautaskilanna í Norður Atlantshafi frá mestu ísöld fyrir um 18.000 árum til núverandi stöðu skilanna (Ruddiman og Mclntyre, 1981). deep sea sediments The Glacial-Holocene transition in the Northern Atlantic has been studied in deep sea cores (Ruddi- man and Mclntyre, 1981). These studies demonstrate major shifts in the oceanic polar front in concordance with the Late Weichselian oscillation (Fig. 4). It is suggested from this data that the NA current has crossed the NA ocean, heading for Portugal, from the glacial maximum until the Bölling period and during the Younger Dryas period. Possible causes for such excursions of the NA current have been discussed by Fuddiman and Glover (1975). They claim from hy- drodynamic arguments that this can only be explained by heavy wind stress from westerly winds. In the Dye-3 core greatly increased dust load during the cold sPells in later half of the Glacial period provides ample evidence for increased storms and suggests that sim- har excursions of the NA current has happened some 14 times during the latter half of the last glaciation. Carbon isotope measurements on benthic foraminifera from North Atlantic sediment cores (Du- plessy et al., 1988), faunal evidences (Schnitker, 1979) and geochemical studies (Boyle and Keigwin, 1987; Boyle, 1988) provide evidence for different ocean cir- culation during glacial times, and therefore support the hypothesis that the cold climate during glacial time is due to lack of the NA current, which generally warms up the North Atlantic region during the interglacial pe- riods. It has been demonstrated that the concentration of cadmium in foraminifera shells is proportional to its abundance in the sea-water. As the distribution of cadmium in the ocean matches that of phosphate and nitrate its concentration in shells from sediments re- veals the distribution of these chemicals in the glacial ocean. Analyses of cadmium in foraminifera shells show that the characteristics of the Atlantic present- day circulation were missing during glacial time, until about 14.000 years ago and also during the Younger Dryas cold spell about 3.000 years later (Boyle, 1988; Boyle and Keigwin, 1987). Accordingly these studies further support the hy- pothesis that the explanation for the climatic events must involve reorganization of the ocean-atmospheric system. ICELAND Iceland is situated in the North Atlantic ocean and therefore, if the NA-current hypothesis is correct, it should have suffered the same climatic oscillations during the late glacial time as discussed above and are reflected in the Greenland ice cores, lake sediments from Switzerland and from North Atlantic deep sea sediments. Climatic changes are frequently observed from ge- ological evidences. Glacial sediments are suggestive of cold climate and advancing glaciers. Furthermore, extent of glaciation and glacial movements can be studied by observing glacial striations. Raised beaches and shoreline features are on the other hand indicative of warm climate in particular when associated with strong silt formation due to retreating glaciers. Many examples of changing climate can be ob- served within the Icelandic geology. However, in the present account we will limit the discussion on the Late Weichselian time and concentrate on 14C-datings of marine sediments and sea-temperature calculations JÖKULL, No. 40,1990 89
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