6 research outputs found

    Minimal erosion of Arctic alpine topography during late Quaternary glaciation

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    The alpine topography observed in manymountainous regions is thought to have formed during repeated glaciations of the Quaternary period1,2. Before this time, landscapes had much less relief1–3. However, the spatial patterns and rates of Quaternary exhumation at high latitudes—where cold-based glaciers may protect rather than erode landscapes—are not fully quantified. Here we determine the exposure and burial histories of rock samples from eight summits of steep alpine peaks in northwestern Svalbard (79.5 ◦ N) using analyses of 10Be and 26Al concentrations4,5. We find that the summits have been preserved for at least the past one million years. The antiquity of Svalbard’s alpine landscape is supported by the preservation of sediments older than one million years along a fjord valley6, which suggests that both mountain summits and low-elevation landscapes experienced very lo
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