4.2 Article

When were the straits between the Baltic Sea and the Kattegat inundated by the sea during the Holocene?

Journal

BOREAS
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 1079-1094

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bor.12525

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Geocenter Denmark
  2. Danish Council for Independent Research [7014-00113B/FNU]
  3. European Union [869383]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The timing of the flooding of the Danish/German/Swedish straits and the first marine influence in the Baltic Basin after the Ancylus Lake stage has been debated. New research using radiocarbon dating from Danish waters suggests that the Great Belt was inundated before The Sound, with a possible 500-1000 year period of brackish-water influence.
The timing of the flooding of the Danish/German/Swedish straits and the first marine influence in the Baltic Basin after the Ancylus Lake stage has been much debated. Here we present 47 new radiocarbon ages from sediment cores retrieved from Danish waters, ages that record the marine transgression of the area. Most of the ages are based on shells of marine molluscs, hence the ages are uncertain because we do not know the precise reservoir age in the past. We use a reservoir age of 400 years, which is based on dating of museum specimens collected live before testing of nuclear bombs. It appears from the ages that the Great Belt (Storeb AE lt) was inundated before The Sound (oresund). The oldest ages on marine shells from the northern part of the Great Belt region are about 8.9 cal. ka BP. From the central part of the Great Belt, the oldest ages are about 8.2 cal. ka BP, in Mecklenburg Bay 8.1 cal. ka BP and in the Arkona Basin 7.1 cal. ka BP. Sediments deposited prior to the occurrence of marine molluscs contain brackish-water ostracods (Cyprideis torosa and Cytheromorpha fuscata); the sediments are usually laminated and non-bioturbated mud. The brackish-water phase may have lasted 500-1000 years. The youngest lake deposits without signs of marine influence are dated to c. 8.8 cal. ka BP (central Great Belt), 8.7 cal. ka BP (Little Belt) and 8.5 cal. ka BP (Arkona Basin). We see no evidence for marine influence at c. 10 cal. ka BP as recorded by some studies from the Baltic Basin.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available