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Original Articles

Multibeam bathymetry and the depositional environments of Kongsfjorden and Krossfjorden, western Spitsbergen, Svalbard

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Pages 301-316 | Published online: 16 Dec 2016
 

Abstract

Kongsfjorden and Krossfjorden are two ice-proximal fjords on the western coast of Spitsbergen which have been surveyed using multibeam bathymetry, sub-bottom profi ling and gravity coring. Central and outer Kongsfjorden is dominated by a 30 km2 outcrop of bedrock, with a thin (< 10 m) sediment cover. The bedrock displays a relict sub-glacial, ice-scoured topography produced during the glacial re-advances of the Weichselian (20 Ky BP) and again during the last major Holocene re-advance of the Little Ice Age (550 - 200 yrs BP). Drumlins and glacial fl utes are common across the fl oor of Kongsfjorden, with lengths of 1.5 - 2.5 km and widths of < 100 m, rising up to 10 m in water depths of < 100 m. This topography is smoothed by bottom currents from the wind-driven forcing of surface waters. The fl ow is counter-clockwise, matching boundary layer movement under the infl uence of Coriolis force. Both fjords are characterized by a variable acoustic character, based on sub-bottom profi le data. The deepest basins are dominated by parallel, well-laminated refl ectors and an irregular-transparent acoustic character indicating the presence of Holocene-age fi ne-grained sediments up to 30 m thick. A parallel, irregular-transparent acoustic character with waveform morphology in inner Kongsfjorden is interpreted as moraines, originating from the 1948 and 1869 surges of Kronebreen glacier. Mass-fl ows are common on the fl anks of topographic highs as acoustically chaotic-transparent lensoid and wedge-shaped refl ectors. The sediments of outer and central Kongsfjorden are characterized by bioturbated, gas-rich homogeneous muds interpreted as being the result of the settling of fi ne-grained sediment and particulate suspensions.