Temperatures, salinity, wind speed, grain sizes and foraminifera abundance in the Great Belt Channel, western Baltic Sea


Autoria(s): Winn, Kyaw
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 55.350525 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 11.017712 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 55.334000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 10.933000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 55.425000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 11.035000 * DATE/TIME START: 1972-11-14T00:00:00 * DATE/TIME END: 1972-11-15T00:00:00

Data(s)

01/06/1974

Resumo

The Great Belt, the largest inlet to the Baltic Sea, has a deep and well defined channel system. A distinct thermohaline layer at roughly 18 to 20 m of water depth separates the saltier and generally cooler deeper North Sea water from the brackish and warmer surface water. It is practically a current dominated area, with the strongest bottom currents due to prolonged west winds. The size and shape of the surface sediments and their grain size distributions show a close relationship with the prevailing hydrographical conditions. Southerly current marks predominate while northerly directions are confined to 10 to 14 m of water depth. The degree of bioturbation is highest in the uppermost sedimentary cover where practically all original stratification has been destroyed. Various bioturbate structures have been identified with the fauna. Coiling ratios of Ammonia beccarii (Linnaeus) have been successfully applied for correlation in the postglacial sediments of the early Littorina Transgression. The succession shows that in the Boreal brackish water conditions were probably followed by peat and limnic sediments as the sea regressed. With the Littorina Transgression, the sea again entered the area and high sedimentation rates resulted in the major deposits of the Great Belt. At least for the last 4000 years, sedimentation rates had been very low. Present day currents sweep out the sediments, mainly to the southern marginal areas.

Formato

application/zip, 4 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.783418

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.783418

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Winn, Kyaw (1974): Present and postglacial sedimentation in the Great Belt Channel (Western Baltic). Meyniana, 26, 63-101, doi:10.2312/meyniana.1974.26.63

Palavras-Chave #<40 µm; >2 mm; 2000-40 µm; 50 years average; A. beccarii; A. cassis; A. runiana; Ammonia beccarii; Ammoscalaria runiana; Ammotium cassis; average 1931-1960; average of 1931-1960; B. elegantissima; B. marginata; BC; Box corer; Bulimina marginata; Bulimina sp.; Buliminella elegantissima; C. albiumbilicatum; C. asklundi; C. excavatum; C. incertum; C. lobatulus; C. pauciloculum; Cibicides lobatulus; Cribrononion albiumbilicatum; Cribrononion asklundi; Cribrononion excavatum; Cribrononion incertus; Cribrononion pauciloculum; Dentalina sp.; Depth; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; DEPTH, water; Depth bot; Depth top; Depth water; Description; E. scabra; Eggerella scabra; Event; F. fusiformis; ff month m; Fursenkoina fusiformis; G. globulosa; GIK12514-1; GIK12519-1; GIK12520-1; GIK12525-1; GIK-cruise; given in per mil; average of 1931-1960; Globigerina sp.; Grain size, mean; Great_Belt; Great Belt, western Baltic Sea, off Denmark; Group; gs mean; Guembelina globulosa; L. semilineata; L. sulcata laevicostata; Lagena semilineata; Lagena sp.; Lagena sulcata laevicostata; Month; MULT; Multiple investigations; N. cf. grateloupi; NOBS; Nonionella cf. grateloupi; Nonionella sp.; Number of observations; P. cf. anglicum; Protelphidium cf. anglicum; R. dentaliniformis regularis; R. subfusiformis; Reophax dentaliniformis regularis; Reophax subfusiformis; S. biformis; Sal; Salinity; Sand, mean; Sand mean; Sediment; Sediment type; Size fraction < 0.040 mm; Size fraction > 2 mm, gravel; Size fraction 2.000-0.040 mm; Spiroplectammina biformis; stratigraphic position; Temp; Temperature, air, monthly mean; Temperature, water; TTT monthly m; Western Baltic Sea; Wind dir descr; Wind direction description; Wind speed, monthly mean; windspeed >8 Bft; monthly mean, 50 years average; windspeed 0 Bft; monthly mean, 50 years average; windspeed 1-3 Bft; monthly mean, 50 years average; windspeed 4-5 Bft; monthly mean, 50 years average; windspeed 6-7 Bft; monthly mean, 50 years average
Tipo

Dataset