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Lost loesses: earth reflections

Authors :
van Loon, A.J.
Source :
Earth-Science Reviews. Feb, 2006, Vol. 74 Issue 3-4, p309, 8 p.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Loesses form wide belts in front of previously glaciated areas. Their thicknesses may be considerable, changing in Eurasia from maximally a few metres in the west to a hundred metres or more in the east. The Eastern (particularly Chinese) loesses are mostly unrelated to glaciations. The periglacial loesses from China and elsewhere predominantly date from the last Pleistocene glaciation: relatively few comparable occurrences are known from earlier Quaternary glaciations. As it is difficult to imagine that the conditions in front of the land-ice masses during the earlier glaciations differed fundamentally from those of the last one, considerable quantities of loess must have disappeared. This disappearance, which is commonly ascribed to fluvial and eolian erosion, is not easily explained as equivalent deposits that may have the older loesses as a source, are practically absent. A possible explanation might be that loess is recycled during successive glaciations. Some loess disappears during interglacials by erosion, but this quantity is more than compensated by the formation of new silt particles. The implication would be that the loess deposits increase in volume for each new glaciation. Keywords: silt; periglacial processes; sediment recycling; sorting; eolian abrasion; glacial grinding

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00128252
Volume :
74
Issue :
3-4
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Earth-Science Reviews
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.144404074