Saale glaciation
The Saale glaciation or Saale Glaciation, sometimes referred to as the Saalian glaciation, Saale cold period, Saale complex or Saale glacial stage, covers the middle of the three large glaciations in Northern Europe and the northern parts of Eastern Europe, Central Europe and Western Europe by the Scandinavian Inland Ice Sheet. It follows the Holstein interglacial and precedes the Eemian interglacial, spanning from around 400,000 years ago to 130,000 years ago. The Saalian covers multiple glacial cycles punctuated by interglacial periods. In its latter part it is coeval with the global Penultimate Glacial Period.
Age and definitions
The Saalian succeeded the Holstein interglacial and was followed by the Eemian interglacial Though the start date of the Saalian was historically controversial, recent scholarship has suggested that the start date of the Saalian is around 400,000 years ago. The Saalian encompasses multiple glacial cycles separated by interglacial periods. The first cold phase at the start of the Saale complexes is separated by a warmer period from the actual Saale "ice age". The term "Saale Ice Age" or "Saale Glacial" thus has 2 meanings in the literature – it sometimes refers to the phase in which the glacier advanced into North Germany, but can also refer to the whole Saale complex. The terms are frequently interchanged in the literature.The Saale Glaciation occurred at around the same time as the Wolstonian Stage in the British Isles and the Illinoian Stage in North America.
In 1910, the name for "Saale glaciation" was given by German geologists Jacob Stoller and Konrad Keilhack.
Extent
The maximum advance of the ice sheet in North Germany during the Drenthe Stage is described by a line from Düsseldorf via Paderborn, Hamelin, Goslar, Eisleben, Zeitz and Meissen to Görlitz. From the eastern edge of the Harz eastwards the ice advanced to about 10 to 50 km behind the maximum extent of the Elster glaciation. On the northern edge of the Harz the two ice sheets reached the same line; and west of the Harz the ice of the Saale complex extended over 100 km further south than the ice sheet of the Elster. In front of this line, i.e. in front of the former glaciers, fluviatile and periglacial sediments are widespread. In the Drenthe Stage the present day North Sea basin, Great Britain and Ireland were also affected.Several species were hurt by the glaciation, including the woolly mammoths, which suffered a reduction comparable to the one towards the end of the ice age.
File:SaaleWeichsel x.png|thumb|upright=1.85|The Würm glaciation in comparison with the Riss. Glacial advances were interrupted by warmer interstadials. In these some ancient European co-ancestors spread out from mountain zones over the intermittent permafrost to the north and northeast. Then from about 40,000 BC European early modern humans more greatly settled these regions.
Sequence and subdivisions
The Saale complex may be divided into a lower and an upper section, with glacial advances into Northern Germany.The Saale Early Glacial includes the:
- Dömnitz interglacial, which was characterised by oak mixed forest, hazel and hornbeam. Worth mentioning is the discovery of Water Fern.
- Fuhne glacial. After the end of the Holstein interglacial, the forests of North Germany died and a sub-arctic vegetation formed.
- Warthe Stage or Stadium
- Drenthe Stage or Stadium
- * Drenthe II Phase
- * Drenthe I Phase
In the work by Litt et al. focussed on the southern perimeter of the North German glaciations, the upper part of the Saale complex is subdivided as follows:
- Warthe Stage
- Seyda Interval
- Drenthe Stage
- * Leipzig Phase
- * Pomßen Interval
- * Zeitz Phase
Saale glacial stage is the Breslau-Magdeburg-Bremen Urstromtal, which was not subsequently covered by ice.
Literature
- Thomas Litt, Karl-Ernst Behre, Klaus-Dieter Meyer, Hans-Jürgen Stephan und Stefan Wansa: . Eiszeitalter und Gegenwart, 56: 7–65, Hanover, 2007.
- Leopold Benda : Das Quartär Deutschlands. 408 pp., Borntraeger, Berlin, Stuttgart, 1995
Category:Ice ages