A 30 m-deep drill core from a glacially overdeepened trough in Northern Switzerland recovered a ~180 ka old sedimentary succession that provides new insights into the timing and nature of erosion–sedimentation processes in the Swiss lowlands. The luminescence-dated stratigraphic succession starts at the bottom of the core with laminated carbonate-rich lake sediments reflecting deposition in a proglacial lake between ~180 and 130 ka ago (Marine Isotope Stage MIS 6). Anomalies in geotechnical properties and the occurrence of deformation structures suggest temporary ice contact around 140 ka. Up-core, organic content increases in the lake deposits indicating a warming of climate. These sediments are overlain by a peat deposit characterised by ...
The Quaternary filling of the Upper Rhine Graben is an excellent archive to reconstruct sediment dyn...
Regional pollen assemblage zones for the late-glacial period of the Swiss Plateau are introduced and...
Erosional denudation of the Alps and their role as sediment source underwent major changes throughou...
A 30m-deep drill core from a glacially overdeepened trough in Northern Switzerland recovered a ~180k...
We drilled a 210 m-thick succession of Quaternary sediments and extended it 30 m upsection with info...
While timing and ice extent of the last glacial maximum are generally well known, the courses of ear...
Quaternary deposits in the overdeepened Wehntal, Switzerland, were investigated using both seismic p...
The modern, over 250-m-deep basin of Lake Constance represents the underfilled northern part of an o...
Previous research suggested that the Alpine glaciers of the Northern Swiss Foreland reached their ma...
Peat and lake sediments as well as a nearby soil catena were sampled to reconstruct the environmenta...
During the Quaternary glacial–interglacial cycles, glaciers repeatedly advanced from the Alps into t...
The sedimentary infill of subglacially eroded bedrock troughs in the Alps are underexplored archives...
For perialpine regions, lake sediments are outstanding archives to reconstruct an event stratigraphy...
The Swiss Deckenschotter (“cover gravels”) is the oldest Quaternary units in the northern Swiss Alpi...
In the northern Alpine region only a few lacustrine sediment sequences are known from the period of ...
The Quaternary filling of the Upper Rhine Graben is an excellent archive to reconstruct sediment dyn...
Regional pollen assemblage zones for the late-glacial period of the Swiss Plateau are introduced and...
Erosional denudation of the Alps and their role as sediment source underwent major changes throughou...
A 30m-deep drill core from a glacially overdeepened trough in Northern Switzerland recovered a ~180k...
We drilled a 210 m-thick succession of Quaternary sediments and extended it 30 m upsection with info...
While timing and ice extent of the last glacial maximum are generally well known, the courses of ear...
Quaternary deposits in the overdeepened Wehntal, Switzerland, were investigated using both seismic p...
The modern, over 250-m-deep basin of Lake Constance represents the underfilled northern part of an o...
Previous research suggested that the Alpine glaciers of the Northern Swiss Foreland reached their ma...
Peat and lake sediments as well as a nearby soil catena were sampled to reconstruct the environmenta...
During the Quaternary glacial–interglacial cycles, glaciers repeatedly advanced from the Alps into t...
The sedimentary infill of subglacially eroded bedrock troughs in the Alps are underexplored archives...
For perialpine regions, lake sediments are outstanding archives to reconstruct an event stratigraphy...
The Swiss Deckenschotter (“cover gravels”) is the oldest Quaternary units in the northern Swiss Alpi...
In the northern Alpine region only a few lacustrine sediment sequences are known from the period of ...
The Quaternary filling of the Upper Rhine Graben is an excellent archive to reconstruct sediment dyn...
Regional pollen assemblage zones for the late-glacial period of the Swiss Plateau are introduced and...
Erosional denudation of the Alps and their role as sediment source underwent major changes throughou...