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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Arctic Ocean
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Norwegian Sea (1)
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Arctic region
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Greenland
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East Greenland (1)
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Greenland ice sheet (1)
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Scoresby Sund (1)
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West Greenland (2)
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Baffin Bay (1)
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United States
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Alaska (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Holocene (1)
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Pleistocene (1)
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Pliocene (1)
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Primary terms
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Arctic Ocean
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Norwegian Sea (1)
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Arctic region
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Greenland
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East Greenland (1)
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Greenland ice sheet (1)
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Scoresby Sund (1)
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West Greenland (2)
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Holocene (1)
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Pleistocene (1)
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Pliocene (1)
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climate change (2)
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geophysical methods (2)
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glacial geology (1)
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Ocean Drilling Program
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Leg 105
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ODP Site 645 (1)
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Leg 162
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ODP Site 987 (1)
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paleoclimatology (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks (1)
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sediments
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marine sediments (1)
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United States
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Alaska (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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contourite (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks (1)
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sediments
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contourite (1)
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sediments
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marine sediments (1)
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Holocene gigascale rock avalanches in Vaigat strait, West Greenland—Implications for geohazard
A contourite drift system on the Baffin Bay–West Greenland margin linking Pliocene Arctic warming to poleward ocean circulation
A re-evaluation of the Pleistocene behavior of the Scoresby Sund sector of the Greenland Ice Sheet
Abstract Throughout Paleocene and Eocene time the Faroe-Shetland Channel and the eastern part of the Faroe Platform was a subsiding marine basin. In Early Paleocene time, basin-floor fans of a British provenance were deposited in the eastern part of the basin. In Late Paleocene time, c. 6 km of basalt entered the basin from the west and north, and the basin was constricted by the large volumes of basalt that entered the basin, creating the Faroe-Shetland Escarpment. In Eocene time subsidence continued in the basinal areas. Again, sediments of a dominantly eastern provenance were deposited. Throughout Eocene time, erosion products from the Faroe Platform were possibly deposited in the Faroe Bank Channel and the Norwegian Sea Basin, but only to a limited degree in the Faroe-Shetland Channel. The oldest sediments of documented western provenance on the eastern margin of the Faroe Platform are of Early Oligocene age. During a compressional phase commencing in Mid-Late Miocene time some basinal areas emerged and erosion took place on the top of emerged anticlines. However, denudation throughout Late Miocene and Early Pliocene time was apparently rather limited compared with a Late Pliocene phase of denudation. During this phase of denudation, a large progradational wedge was deposited on the eastern margin of the Faroe Platform. On the basis of a structural analysis of the Faroe Platform, the amount of basalt removed from it during Cenozoic time is estimated to be c. 46 000 km 3 (131100X10 12 kg). Using 2900kgm −3 as the density of basalt and 2300 kg m −3 as sediment density the estimated amount of removed basalt is in fair agreement with the estimate of the volume of sediments derived from the platform (c. 56000 km 3 , 114 800 X 10 12 kg). The greatest deposition rates on the eastern Faroe Platform and in the Faroe-Shetland Channel apparently occurred after two distinct inversion or compression events in Mid-Eocene and Mid-Late Miocene time. However, uplift of the Faroe Platform could have been forced by denudation rather than endogenous processes.