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Bennike, Ole
Quaternary geology and biology of the Jørgen Brønlund Fjord area, North Greenland
1987, 24 sider Illustreret 19 x 26,5 cm
ISBN 978-87-635-1183-4
Serie:
Monographs on Greenland | Meddelelser om Grønland, vol. 259
ISSN 0025-6676
Serie:
Geoscience, vol. 18
ISSN 0106-1046
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Prior to the last deglaciation, probably in the Late Weichselian, glaciers draining the Inland Ice were present in Independence Fjord and J0rgen Br0nlund Fjord, and a glacier draining an ice cap in the north was present in the B0rglum Elv valley. It is proposed that glacier fronts were situated at the mouth of J0rgen Br0nlund Fjord during a halt in the deglaciation 8000-9000 years BP, and that this halt led to a low initial
rate of emergence. J0rgen Brønlund Fjord was deglaciated 8000-7600 years BP. The early Holocene marine limit is c. 65 m above sea-level in the fjord, and c. 80 m east of the fjord. The slow initial rate of emergence was soon followed by rapid emergence. Emergence of the land continued until about 1000 years BP.
Part of the marine invertebrate fauna was established just after deglaciation. The same probably applies to the terrestrial flora and fauna. By 6000 years BP entry of driftwood and southern marine mammals began, and it continues today. Around 4000 years BP the Independence I people made their appearance, later the Independence
11 people and the Thule eskimos inhabited the area.
The geomorphological features show a resemblance to those from valleys in Antarctica.
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