The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, Estonia

The results of lithological, biostratigraphical and chronostratigraphical studies on the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Estonia (lat 58°22' N, long 22°40' E) are discussed. Two pollen diagrams and 18 radiocarbon dates from different materials are presented. Due to the small area an...

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Main Authors: L. Saarse, R. Rajamäe, A. Heinsalu, J. Vassiljev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geological Society of Finland 1991-12-01
Series:Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.geologinenseura.fi/bulletin/Volume63/sgs_bt_063_2_pages_129_139.pdf
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spelling doaj-ba9d7614369046bcbd5a8428ba16ea4e2020-11-24T23:38:48ZengGeological Society of FinlandBulletin of the Geological Society of Finland0367-52111799-46321991-12-0163212913910.17741/bgsf/63.2.006The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, EstoniaL. SaarseR. RajamäeA. HeinsaluJ. VassiljevThe results of lithological, biostratigraphical and chronostratigraphical studies on the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Estonia (lat 58°22' N, long 22°40' E) are discussed. Two pollen diagrams and 18 radiocarbon dates from different materials are presented. Due to the small area and deep slopes, Lake Kaali bottom sediments are mixed with allocthonous mineral matter, humus, plant remnants and woody pieces. Pollen records (the extraordinarily high value of Betula pollen in the lowermost spectra, the low Picea pollen frequency and the Quercus pollen maximum) indicate that the meteorite impact catastrophe occurred at about 4000 BP. Soon afterwards the crater ring wall was inhabited by Bronze Age man. At about 2900‒2500 BP, the crater lake dried out and the formation of gyttja was replaced by woody peat accumulation. A return to deepwater conditions at the end of the Early Subatlantic chronozone is marked by deposition of clayey calcareous gyttja. http://www.geologinenseura.fi/bulletin/Volume63/sgs_bt_063_2_pages_129_139.pdfmeteor craterslake sedimentsbiostratigraphypollen diagramsabsolute ageHoloceneLake KaaliEstonia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. Saarse
R. Rajamäe
A. Heinsalu
J. Vassiljev
spellingShingle L. Saarse
R. Rajamäe
A. Heinsalu
J. Vassiljev
The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, Estonia
Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland
meteor craters
lake sediments
biostratigraphy
pollen diagrams
absolute age
Holocene
Lake Kaali
Estonia
author_facet L. Saarse
R. Rajamäe
A. Heinsalu
J. Vassiljev
author_sort L. Saarse
title The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, Estonia
title_short The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, Estonia
title_full The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, Estonia
title_fullStr The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, Estonia
title_full_unstemmed The biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Saaremaa island, Estonia
title_sort biostratigraphy of sediments deposited in the lake kaali meteorite impact structure, saaremaa island, estonia
publisher Geological Society of Finland
series Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland
issn 0367-5211
1799-4632
publishDate 1991-12-01
description The results of lithological, biostratigraphical and chronostratigraphical studies on the Lake Kaali meteorite impact structure, Estonia (lat 58°22' N, long 22°40' E) are discussed. Two pollen diagrams and 18 radiocarbon dates from different materials are presented. Due to the small area and deep slopes, Lake Kaali bottom sediments are mixed with allocthonous mineral matter, humus, plant remnants and woody pieces. Pollen records (the extraordinarily high value of Betula pollen in the lowermost spectra, the low Picea pollen frequency and the Quercus pollen maximum) indicate that the meteorite impact catastrophe occurred at about 4000 BP. Soon afterwards the crater ring wall was inhabited by Bronze Age man. At about 2900‒2500 BP, the crater lake dried out and the formation of gyttja was replaced by woody peat accumulation. A return to deepwater conditions at the end of the Early Subatlantic chronozone is marked by deposition of clayey calcareous gyttja.
topic meteor craters
lake sediments
biostratigraphy
pollen diagrams
absolute age
Holocene
Lake Kaali
Estonia
url http://www.geologinenseura.fi/bulletin/Volume63/sgs_bt_063_2_pages_129_139.pdf
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