3 research outputs found

    Relocated interglacial lacustrine sediments from an esker at Snickarekullen, S.W. Sweden

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    Lumps of diatom-rich, laminated sediments were discovered redeposited and interbedded in a Late Weichselian delta sequence in a small glaciofluvial esker at Snickarekullen, south-western Sweden. Radiocarbon dating of the sediments gave an infinite age (≫45 000 B.P.). The composition and sediment structure of the lumps were studied in epoxy-impregnated thin sections using SEM and EDS. Quantitative and qualitative diatom analyses of the sediments were carried out, as well as pollen and macrofossils analyses. The biostratigraphy is compared with that from Holsteinian interglacial sites in surrounding countries, the evidence for which is briefly reviewed. It is concluded that the sediments were deposited in the central part of a lake probably during different parts of the Holsteinian interglacial. The water body changed from a rather shallow lake with a high pH to a considerably deeper, oligotrophic lake with neutral to slightly acidic water during the sedimentation period. The local and regional vegetation developed from an open pine-birch forest into a much more closed vegetation of pine, spruce, larch, alder and hornbeam
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