Publication Date:
2007-10-08
Description:
This research was carried out on the Brogger Peninsula, northwest Spitsbergen, Svalbard (79{degrees}N 12{degrees}E). In the western part of Spitsbergen, cold-based valley glaciers have retreated more than 1 km from their Little Ice Age limits, and glacial meltwater has extensively reworked glacigenic sediments on exposed glacier forelands. In such areas, a paraglacial sediment transport regime has become predominant, with runoff as the dominant process. A combination of GIS, DEM, aerial photographic and field data was employed to estimate shoreline progradation at sandur outflows. Average shoreline progradation is estimated to amount to 3 m/annum over the last 30 years, a period of uninterrupted sediment provision from the glacial runoff system.
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