RELIEF AND SAPROLITES THROUGH TIME ON THE BALTIC SHIELD

Citation
K. Lidmarbergstrom, RELIEF AND SAPROLITES THROUGH TIME ON THE BALTIC SHIELD, Geomorphology, 12(1), 1995, pp. 45-61
Citations number
82
Categorie Soggetti
Geografhy,"Geosciences, Interdisciplinary",Geology
Journal title
ISSN journal
0169555X
Volume
12
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
45 - 61
Database
ISI
SICI code
0169-555X(1995)12:1<45:RASTTO>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
The relief of basement rocks in high latitudes has most often been int erpreted as the result of glacial erosion, although over large areas i ts character of exhumed paleoplains has been known for a long time. Th e relief in the Precambrian basement of Sweden has therefore been anal ysed in relation to remnants of late Proterozoic and Phanerozoic cover rocks. Most of the shield was exposed in the late Proterozoic. The en d result was an extremely flat surface, the primary peneplain. It was covered by Palaeozoic rocks, which preserved this surface until re-exp osure. As a sub-Cambrian surface it makes up the present scenery in la rge parts of eastern and central Sweden.The South Swedish Dome is a ke y area for the geomorphic analysis of the shield, as it has Palaeozoic cover rocks on its northern and eastern slopes and Mesozoic rocks on its southern and western ones. Based on the experience from this area, classification of the relief in the whole country, and experiences fr om the tropics on relief evolution, two theoretical schemes were const ructed for a discussion of the relief differentiation. The analysis of the relationship between relief, saprolite, and cover rocks through t ime led to the conclusion that the most important factor for the prese nt relief differentiation is the time of exposure of the basement surf ace during the Phanerozoic. This has important applications for the ev aluation of Phanerozoic crustal movements as well as implications for the assessment of glacial erosion. The approach is thought to be most valuable for comparative studies of shield geomorphology in general an d with the Laurentian Shield in particular.