Anders Elverhøi
University of Oslo
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Featured researches published by Anders Elverhøi.
Marine Geology | 1996
Edward L. King; Hans Petter Sejrup; Haflidi Haflidason; Anders Elverhøi; Inge Aarseth
Abstract Approximately 1000 km of high resolution sleeve-gun array transects on the North Sea Fan, located at the mouth of the Norwegian Channel, reveal three dominant styles of sedimentation within a thick (> 900 m) Quaternary sediment wedge comprising numerous sequences. These are interpreted as: terrigenous hemipelagic sedimentation, large scale translational slides, and aprons of glaciogenic debris flow deposits contributing to considerable fan construction. Four large, buried translational slides involved sediment volumes upwards of 3000 km 3 each and preceded the similarly dimensioned “first” Storegga Slide on the NE fan flank. Several thick (> 100 m) terrigenous hemipelagic deposits apparently represent long-lived (150–200 kyr) periods of sedimentation whose distribution indicates fan input via the Norwegian Channel. The upper sequences are each made upper sequences are each made up of one or several thick (> 100 m) aprons comprising stacked lensoid and/or lobate forms which range from 2 to 40 km in width and 15 to 60 m in thickness. They characterize debris flows attributed to periodic input from several phases of a Norwegian Channel ice stream reaching the shelf edge. Subsidence in the outer Norwegian Channel allowed preservation of several glaciation cycles represented by sheet erosion-bounded tills and progradational units. Much of the shelf/slope transition has been preserved, allowing a preliminary chronology of the fan sequences through correlation with borehole sediments in the Norwegian Channel. Debris flows, which signal the initial shelf-edge glaciation, are not recognized from the initial glaciation in the Channel (> 1.1 Myr) but are associated with a Middle Pleistocene and all following glacial erosion surfaces (GES) in the outer Norwegian Channel. This was followed by six further sequences, probably totalling over 13,000 km 3 of sediment. At least four of these were shelf-edge ice-maximum events the last of which was Late Weichselian age ( 14 C AMS). Considering earlier glaciation-related hemipelagic sedimentation, material since removed by the large slides, and extensive unmapped areas, total Quaternary fan sedimentation was in the vicinity of 20,000 km 3 .
Geophysical Research Letters | 1996
Julian A. Dowdeswell; Neil H. Kenyon; Anders Elverhøi; Jan Sverre Laberg; F.-J. Hollender; Jürgen Mienert; Martin J. Siegert
Long-range side-scan sonar (GLORIA) imagery of over 600,000 km² of the Polar North Atlantic provides a large-scale view of sedimentation patterns on this glacier-influenced continental margin. High-latitude margins are influenced strongly by glacial history and ice dynamics and, linked to this, the rate of sediment supply. Extensive glacial fans (up to 350,000 km³) were built up from stacked series of large debris flows transferring sediment down the continental slope. The fans were linked with high debris inputs from Quaternary glaciers at the mouths of cross-shelf troughs and deep fjords. Where ice was slower-moving, but still extended to the shelf break, large-scale slide deposits are observed. Where ice failed to cross the continental shelf during full glacials, the continental slope was sediment starved and submarine channels and smaller slides developed. A simple model for large-scale sedimentation on the glaciated continental margins of the Polar North Atlantic is presented.
The Journal of Geology | 1995
Anders Elverhøi; John Inge Svendsen; Anders Solheim; Espen S. Andersen; John D. Milliman; Jan Mangerud; Roger LeB. Hooke
Late Quaternary sediment yields from the Isfjorden drainage area (
Marine Geology | 1996
Espen S. Andersen; Trond M. Dokken; Anders Elverhøi; Anders Solheim; Ingrid Fossen
Marine Geology | 1989
Anders Elverhøi; Stephanie L Pfirman; Anders Solheim; Bengt B. Larssen
7327 km^{2}
Marine Geology | 1984
Anders Elverhøi
Quaternary Science Reviews | 1993
Anders Elverhøi; Willy Fjeldskaar; Anders Solheim; Mona Nyland-Berg; Lars Russwurm
), a high arctic region on Svalbard characterized by an alpine landscape, have been reconstructed by using seismic stratigraphy supported by sediment core analysis. The sediments that accumulated in the fjord during and since deglaciation can be divided into three stratigraphic units. The volumes of these units were determined and converted into sediment yield rates averaged over the drainage basin. During deglaciation, 13 to 10 ka, the sediment yield was
Marine Geology | 1992
John Inge Svendsen; Jan Mangerud; Anders Elverhøi; Anders Solheim; Ruud Te Schüttenhelm
Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 1990
Anders Solheim; Lars Russwurm; Anders Elverhøi; Mona Nyland Berg
\sim 860 tons(t) \cdot km^{-2} \cdot yr^{-1}
Global and Planetary Change | 1996
Berit Oline Hjelstuen; Anders Elverhøi; Jan Inge Faleide