4.7 Article

Detrital zircon U-Pb age analysis of last glacial loess sources and proglacial sediment dynamics in the Northern European Plain

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 274, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.107265

Keywords

Dust; Provenance; Quaternary; Poland; River dynamics

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council (VR) [2017-03888]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41920104005, 42111530183]
  3. Swedish Research Council [2017-03888] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Loess deposits in Europe are complex, with sources including glaciofluvial outwash plains near the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet and local mountainous areas. Detrital zircon analysis of loess samples reveals a mixture of sources, indicating long-term glacial and fluvial reworking. Additionally, loess deposition is mainly influenced by river distribution and aeolian transport.
Loess deposits along the northern fringe of the European loess belt potentially record past changes in dust emission from areas proximal to former ice sheets. Recent chronologies from loess deposits across this region generally agree on greatly enhanced dust deposition rates when the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet reached its maximum extent during the late last glacial. However, uncertainties over the material's source and origin limit understanding of the causes of this enhanced dust activity. In particular, loess in southwestern Poland has been attributed to multiple origins, mainly involving glaciofluvial outwash plains along the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet margin and/or local sources in the mountainous areas of the Sudetes and Western Carpathians. Here we apply detrital zircon U-Pb age analyses for a large number of grains recovered from four loess samples taken from different stratigraphic units exposed at Bialy KoSciol in southwestern Poland, previously luminescence dated to MIS 4-2, to assess loess provenance as well as its temporal evolution during last glacial Fennoscandian Ice Sheet fluctuations. Furthermore, we analysed the detrital zircon U-Pb age spectra of five samples from potential source sediments to constrain the history of sediment recycling and mixing within the Northern European Plain prior to deflation and loess deposition. The broad range of zircon age components detected in the four loess samples suggests both Fennoscandian and closer Peri-Gondwanan proto-sources while a narrow, dominant Carboniferous age peak is consistent with sourcing from the local Strzelin Hills in the Sudetic foreland. However, the presence of both Fennoscandian and Peri-Gondwanan derived grains in samples from potential source sediments reveals that this mixture of sediment sources is widespread across the Northern European Plain, as a result of long-term glacial and fluvial reworking of cover sediments in the proglacial area throughout the Quaternary. Local rivers draining the Sudetic foreland transported this FennoscandianPeri-Gondwanan sediment mixture along with particles denuded from the Strzelin Hills, resulting in a nearby, temporally stable dust source for the Bialy KoSciol loess during MIS 4-2, while dust emission rates were substantially increased during the last glacial maximum. Given that our model for loess formation at Bialy KoSciol essentially involves sediment distribution via rivers prior to short distance aeolian transport, we infer that the proportion of northern ice sheet derived particles in European loess deposits is mainly controlled by the drainage pattern of major rivers in relation to Pleistocene ice margins where glaciofluvial sediment is abundant. Based on the presence of Fennoscandian derived zircon grains in European loess deposits, we constrain a southern limit of the influence of northern ice sheet dust sources along the central European highlands that currently divide drainage between the Northern European Plain and the Danube Basins. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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