Standard

Geomorphological evidence of Lake Ladoga Holocene regressions after the Baltic Ice lake drainage (derived from sediment echosounder data). / Aksenov, Aleksei; Krastel, Sebastian; Rybalko, Alexander; Fedorov, Grigory.

In: Limnology and Freshwater Biology, No. 4, 2022, p. 1378-1380.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

BibTeX

@article{2da991115fc7472cab81a89d9f0a72d9,
title = "Geomorphological evidence of Lake Ladoga Holocene regressions after the Baltic Ice lake drainage (derived from sediment echosounder data)",
abstract = "Abstract. Lake Ladoga has been experiencing frequent water-level fluctuations during the Holocene. Plenty surveys about reconstructions of lake level were published during the last century. They focused on the onshore transgressive sediments and landforms, while a regression below present level was only an assumption. Here for the first time, we present indications of lake-level lowstands by means of sediment echosounder data collected within the PLOT-project . Three types of landforms of coastal and terrestrial origin are detected in the basin. These are coastal bars, erosional terraces and buried erosional valleys. Three paleo-shorelines were determined at depths of 13, 21 and 40-42 m. The first two shorelines are identified by the presence of the coastal bars, while the level of maximum regression is obtained from erosional marks. Reported landforms are assumed to be formed in the Early Holocene following the Baltic Ice Lake drainage.",
author = "Aleksei Aksenov and Sebastian Krastel and Alexander Rybalko and Grigory Fedorov",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.31951/2658-3518-2022-a-4-1378",
language = "English",
pages = "1378--1380",
journal = "Limnology and Freshwater Biology",
issn = "2658-3518",
publisher = "Лимнологический институт Сибирского отделения Российской академии наук",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Geomorphological evidence of Lake Ladoga Holocene regressions after the Baltic Ice lake drainage (derived from sediment echosounder data)

AU - Aksenov, Aleksei

AU - Krastel, Sebastian

AU - Rybalko, Alexander

AU - Fedorov, Grigory

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Abstract. Lake Ladoga has been experiencing frequent water-level fluctuations during the Holocene. Plenty surveys about reconstructions of lake level were published during the last century. They focused on the onshore transgressive sediments and landforms, while a regression below present level was only an assumption. Here for the first time, we present indications of lake-level lowstands by means of sediment echosounder data collected within the PLOT-project . Three types of landforms of coastal and terrestrial origin are detected in the basin. These are coastal bars, erosional terraces and buried erosional valleys. Three paleo-shorelines were determined at depths of 13, 21 and 40-42 m. The first two shorelines are identified by the presence of the coastal bars, while the level of maximum regression is obtained from erosional marks. Reported landforms are assumed to be formed in the Early Holocene following the Baltic Ice Lake drainage.

AB - Abstract. Lake Ladoga has been experiencing frequent water-level fluctuations during the Holocene. Plenty surveys about reconstructions of lake level were published during the last century. They focused on the onshore transgressive sediments and landforms, while a regression below present level was only an assumption. Here for the first time, we present indications of lake-level lowstands by means of sediment echosounder data collected within the PLOT-project . Three types of landforms of coastal and terrestrial origin are detected in the basin. These are coastal bars, erosional terraces and buried erosional valleys. Three paleo-shorelines were determined at depths of 13, 21 and 40-42 m. The first two shorelines are identified by the presence of the coastal bars, while the level of maximum regression is obtained from erosional marks. Reported landforms are assumed to be formed in the Early Holocene following the Baltic Ice Lake drainage.

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/c9255117-923c-3ede-9357-8552656c4125/

U2 - 10.31951/2658-3518-2022-a-4-1378

DO - 10.31951/2658-3518-2022-a-4-1378

M3 - Article

SP - 1378

EP - 1380

JO - Limnology and Freshwater Biology

JF - Limnology and Freshwater Biology

SN - 2658-3518

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 100936154