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Architecture of tunnel valleys in the southeastern North Sea: new insights from high-resolution seismic imaging
Authors:Arne Lohrberg  Klaus Schwarzer  Daniel Unverricht  Andreas Omlin  Sebastian Krastel
Institution:1. Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Institute of Geosciences, Kiel, Germany;2. Geological Survey of Schleswig-Holstein, Flintbek, Germany
Abstract:Tunnel valleys are assumed to form near the margin of ice sheets. Hence, they can be used to reconstruct the dynamics of former ice margins. The detailed formation and infill of tunnel valleys, however, are still not well understood. Here, we present a dense grid of high-resolution 2D multi-channel reflection seismic data from the German sector of the southeastern North Sea imaging tunnel valleys in very great detail. Three tunnel valley systems were traced over distances ranging between 11 and 21 km. All tunnel valleys are completely filled and buried. They differ in incision depth, incision width and number of incisions. The tunnel valleys cut 130–380 m deep into Neogene, Palaeogene and Cretaceous sediments; they show a lower V-shaped and an upper U-shaped morphology. For individual tunnel valleys, the overall incision direction ranges from east–west to northeast–southwest. Two tunnel valleys intersect at an oblique angle without reuse of the thalweg. These valleys incise into a pre-existing glaciotectonic complex consisting of thrust sheets in the northwest of the study area. The analysis of the glaciotectonic complex and the tunnel valleys leads us to assume that we identified several marginal positions of (pre-)Elsterian ice lobes in the southeastern North Sea.
Keywords:glaciogenic unconformity  glaciotectonic complex  ice margin  Quaternary succession  tunnel valleys
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