EGU21-7098, updated on 21 Jun 2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7098
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Retreat of the Rhine Glacier from Lake Constance: Sedimentological and geochemical evidences from a deep lake-basin drillhole

Sebastian Schaller1, Michael E. Boettcher2, Marius W. Buechi1, Laura S. Epp3, Stefano C. Fabbri1, Natacha Gribenski1, Ulrich Harms4, Sebastian Krastel5, Alina Liebezeit2, Katja Lindhorst5, Ulli Raschke6, David Schleheck3, Iris Schmiedinger2, Antje Schwalb7, Hendrik Vogel1, Martin Wessels8, and Flavio S. Anselmetti1
Sebastian Schaller et al.
  • 1Institute of Geological Sciences and Oeschger Centre of Climate Change Research, University of Bern, Switzerland
  • 2Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research (IOW), Geochemistry & Isotope Biogeochemistry, Marine Geology, Warnemünde, Germany
  • 3Limnological Institute, Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, Germany
  • 4Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Germany
  • 5Institut für Geowissenschaften, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Germany
  • 6Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR), Dept. Stratigraphy and Geoinformation, Berlin, Germany
  • 7Institute of Geosystems and Bioindication, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany
  • 8LUBW, Institute for Lake Research, Langenargen, Germany

The modern basin of trinational Lake Constance, between Switzerland, Germany, and Austria, represents the underfilled northern part of a glacially overdeepened trough. It is over 400 m deep and reaches well into the Alps at its southern end. The overdeepening was formed by the numerous glacial advance-retreat cycles of the Rhine Glacier throughout the Middle to Late Quaternary. A seismic survey of Lake Constance revealed a Quaternary sediment fill of over 150 m thickness under the modern lake floor in a maximal water depth of >250 m. This sedimentary sequence represents at least the last glacial cycle with ice-contact deposits at the base on top of the Molasse bedrock overlain by glaciolacustrine to lacustrine sediments. During the successful field test of a newly developed mid-size coring system ("HIPERCORIG"), the longest core ever taken in Lake Constance was recovered with an overall length of 24 m. The drill core, taken in a water depth of 200 m, consists of a nearly continuous succession of lacustrine sediments including over 12 m of pre-Holocene sediment at the base. The entire core was petrophysically and geochemically analyzed, sedimentologically described, and 14 lithotypes were identified. In combination with a 14C- and OSL-based age-depth model, the core was divided into three main chronostratigraphic units. The basal age of ~13.7 ka BP places the base of the section back into the Bølling-Allerød interstadial whereas the overlying strata represent a complete Younger-Dryas and Holocene section.

The sediments offer a high-resolution insight into the evolution of Paleolake Constance from a cold postglacial to a more productive warm Holocene lake. The Late Glacial sections are dominated by massive, m-thick sand beds reflecting episodic sedimentation pulses. They are most likely linked with a subaquatic channel system that is still apparent in today's lake bathymetry despite the Holocene drape. This channel system was fed from a Late Glacial river from the north; provenance analysis of the initially unexpected sands together with hydrologic considerations will document whether this inflowing high-discharge river represented a local catchment (i.e. northern lake shore) or an Alpine signal (i.e. from the south) provided by the Rhine glacier. Tentative pore water hydrogeochemical and isotope analyses indicate a still active flow system at depth. The overlying Holocene section reveals a prominent, several cm-thick double-turbiditic event layer representing the most distal impact of the "Flimser Bergsturz", the largest known rock slide of the Alps that occurred over 100 km upstream the Rhine River at ~9.5 ka BP. Furthermore, lithologic variations in the Holocene section document the varying sediment load of the Rhine and of the endogenic production representing a multitude of environmental changes.

How to cite: Schaller, S., Boettcher, M. E., Buechi, M. W., Epp, L. S., Fabbri, S. C., Gribenski, N., Harms, U., Krastel, S., Liebezeit, A., Lindhorst, K., Raschke, U., Schleheck, D., Schmiedinger, I., Schwalb, A., Vogel, H., Wessels, M., and Anselmetti, F. S.: Retreat of the Rhine Glacier from Lake Constance: Sedimentological and geochemical evidences from a deep lake-basin drillhole, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7098, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7098, 2021.

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