• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Sedimentary facies and environmental history of the Late‐glacial glaciomarine Fossvogur sediments in Reykjavík, Iceland
  • Contributor: GEIRSDÓTTIR, ÁSLAUG; EIRÍKSSON, JÓN
  • imprint: Wiley, 1994
  • Published in: Boreas
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/j.1502-3885.1994.tb00597.x
  • ISSN: 1502-3885; 0300-9483
  • Keywords: Geology ; Archeology ; Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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  • Description: <jats:p>A detailed account of facies relationships in the Late‐glacial Fossvogur beds is presented for the first time. A new interpretation in terms of sedimentary processes has been synthesized in a palaeoenvironmental reconstruction that incorporates the results of a recently completed, systematic <jats:sup>14</jats:sup>C dating project for the Fossvogur beds. The present sedimentological analysis has revealed three marine fossiliferous facies and several diamictite facies. The two uppermost marine facies are separated by a horizon of local deformation and erosion which is ascribed to increased activity at a tidewater glacier margin in Fossvogur. The fact that marine fossiliferous sediments below and above this horizon have been confined to the Allerød chron indicates a temporary expansion of glaciers in the Reykjavík region towards the end of, but within, the Allersd. The relative sea level must have been at least 20 m higher than at present before the expansion, and it was probably even higher during and after the expansion. The total absence of facies indicating either lodgement or melt‐out processes, and the abundance of diamictites interpreted as debris‐flow deposits as well as frequent erratics in the marine mudrocks favour an interpretation based on a glaciomarine model for the Allerød deposition in Fossvogur. It is suggested that the relatively quiet, submarine conditions indicated by facies towards the top of the Fossvogur beds display continued transgression and an increased distance to the source of sediment supply during the Younger Dryas.</jats:p>