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1 February 2009 An Overview of Postglacial Sediment Records from Colluvial Accumulations in Northwestern and North Iceland
Armelle Decaulne, Þorsteinn Sæmundsson, Helgi Páll Jónsson
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Abstract

Active denudation processes occurring on slopes in north and northwestern Iceland have contributed to the buildup of large colluvial cones. These processes have been active since around 10,000 14C yr BP when the ice sheet retreated during the last deglaciation. Stratigraphic records provide information of the kind of sedimentary transfer processes that have been active on slopes through time. Vertical sections in colluvial cones in north and northwestern Iceland exhibit a characteristic stratigraphy with successions of material from mass-movements interbedded with soil horizons occurring throughout the Holocene, under periglacial conditions of varying intensity. The alternating organic and minerogenic units are indicators of phases of slope activity and stability.

The dating of the deposits is possible with tephrochronology and 14C dating. The quantitative analysis of sediment on colluvial cones shows the relative importance of aggradation due to slope processes vs. soil formation during the Holocene. Increasing accumulation rates have been observed over historical time since at least a.d. 1104. The clastic deposits observed in north and northwestern Iceland are thought to provide information on extreme events during the Holocene, as the occurrence of mass-wasting release cannot be clearly related to Holocene climatic trends.

Armelle Decaulne, Þorsteinn Sæmundsson, and Helgi Páll Jónsson "An Overview of Postglacial Sediment Records from Colluvial Accumulations in Northwestern and North Iceland," Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 41(1), 37-47, (1 February 2009). https://doi.org/10.1657/1523-0430-41.1.37
Accepted: 1 September 2008; Published: 1 February 2009
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