
Document généré le 16/09/2025 depuis l'adresse: https://www.documentation.eauetbiodiversite.fr/fr/notice/reconstruction-des-transferts-sedimentaires-en-provenance-du-systeme-glaciaire-de-mer-d-irlande-et-du-paleofleuve-manche-au-cours-des-derniers-cycles-climatiques
Reconstruction des transferts sédimentaires en provenance du système glaciaire de Mer d'Irlande et du paléofleuve Manche au cours des derniers cycles climatiques
Titre alternatif
Producteur
Contributeur(s)
Université Bordeaux 1
Identifiant documentaire
9-6328
Identifiant OAI
oai:archimer.ifremer.fr:6328
Auteur(s):
Toucanne, Samuel
Mots clés
Land sea correlations
European fluvial system
glacial Irish Sea system
'Fleuve Manche' palaeoriver
ice sheets
glaciations
climate
Pleistocene
turbidite systems
sediment transfer
Bay of Biscay
corrélations terre mer
réseau de drainage européen
système glaciaire de Mer d'Irlande
Fleuve Manche
calottes glaciaires
glaciations
climat
Pléistocène
systèmes turbiditiques
transferts sédimentaires
Golfe de Gascogne
Date de publication
08/12/2008
Date de création
Date de modification
Date d'acceptation du document
Date de dépôt légal
Langue
fre
Thème
Type de ressource
Source
Droits de réutilisation
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Région
Département
Commune
Description
The Pleistocene has been period of fluctuating climate accompanied by prominent sea-level lowstands during the glacial intervals, when massive continental ice sheets extended from mountainous to lowland European areas. The retreat of the shoreline on the extensive present-day shallow continental shelf of the southern part of the British Isles induced the appearance of the 'Fleuve Manche' palaeoriver, one of the largest systems that drained the European continent. Sedimentary records from the Bay of Biscay offer an independent record allowing the reconstruction of the freshwater and sediment discharges of the 'Fleuve Manche', and the possibility of detecting the imprint of surrounding ice-sheet oscillations and attendant modification of hinterland drainage directions throughout the Pleistocene. For the last 1.2 Ma, the progressive development of extensive Pleistocene ice-sheets over Europe during cold periods favoured sedimentary transfers in the Bay of Biscay, particularly since MIS 12 when the British and Fennoscandian ice sheets merged in the North Sea for the first time, forcing the North Sea fluvial system to flow southwards through the Dover Strait, which opened 455 000 years ago according to our data. From this point onwards, the North Sea drainage, as well as meltwaters that flowed westwards along the southern margin of the Fennoscandian ice-sheet could drain into the Bay of Biscay, as reported through significant terrigenous supplies in the northern Bay of Biscay during the MIS 6 (ca.150 ka) and MIS 2 (ca.18 ka). We assume for example that sediment load delivered to the Bay of Biscay by the 'Fleuve Manche' reached 130 M t yr-1 at time of the last melting of the European ice sheet ca. 18 000 years ago. On the whole, we demonstrate, for the studied period, that climate forcing strongly affects the sediment transfer into the northern Bay of Biscay and the turbiditic activity of the Celtic and Armorican turbidite systems. Finally, the recognition of melting events of the European ice sheets throughout the last 1.2 Ma allows, for the first time, the correlation of the European continental glaciation-derived chronology with the marine isotope stratigraphy.
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