Piedmonttreppen

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A piedmonttreppen or piedmont benchland [1] is a conceived landform consisting in a succession of benches at different heights and that forms in sequence during the uplift of a geological dome. The concept was first proposed in a posthumous publication by Walther Penck in 1924. [2]

Penck's type area for the piedmontreppen was the Black Forest of Germany. [1] [3] Outside Germany the South Swedish Dome has been identified as containing a piedmonttreppen, with the uppermost and oldest surface being the Sub-Cambrian peneplain. It is followed by three surfaces, one at 300 m a.s.l., another at 200 m and then the South Småland peneplain. [4] There have been attempts at describing the southern portion of the Scandinavian Mountains as having a piedmonttreppen topography made up of paleic surfaces in the uplands and a strandflat at sea level. This idea has been strongly contested by Olaf Holtedahl. [5] Later authors also stress that the Scandinavian Mountains cannot be described as a series of domes. [6]

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Scandinavian Mountains Mountain range in Finland, Norway and Sweden

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Sub-Cambrian peneplain

The sub-Cambrian peneplain is an ancient, extremely flat, erosion surface (peneplain) that has been exhumed and exposed by erosion from under Cambrian strata over large swathes of Fennoscandia. Eastward, where this peneplain dips below Cambrian and other Lower Paleozoic cover rocks. The exposed parts of this peneplain are extraordinarily flat with relief of less than 20 m. The overlying cover rocks demonstrate that the peneplain was flooded by shallow seas during the Early Paleozoic. Being the oldest identifiable peneplain in its area the Sub-Cambrian peneplain qualifies as a primary peneplain.

Norrland terrain

Norrland terrain is a geomorphic unit covering the bulk of Norrland and the northwestern half of Svealand. Except for The High Coast the coastal areas of Norrland do not belong to the Norrland terrain. The southern and eastern boundary of the Norrland terrain is made up of geological faults that disrupt the Sub-Cambrian peneplain found the lowlands. In some locations these faults have been extensively eroded making the Norrland terrain boundary partly a result of erosion. Karna Lidmar-Bergström categorizes the Norrland Terrain into the following classes:

  1. Highlands with well developed valleys above 500 m.a.s.l.
  2. Plains with residual hills of Northern Sweden
  3. Undulating hilly land of Övertorneå/Överkalix
  4. Undulating hilly land of Boden area
  5. Large scale joint valley landscapes
  6. Plains with residual hills of Dalarna
  7. Undulating hilly land of Central Sweden
South Swedish highlands

The South Swedish highlands or South Swedish Uplands is a hilly area covering large parts of Götaland in southern Sweden. Except for a lack of deep valleys, the landscape is similar to the Norrland terrain found further north in Sweden. The central-eastern parts of the highlands contain about thirty narrow canyons locally known as skurus.

South Småland peneplain

The South Småland peneplain is a large flattish erosion surface, a peneplain, formed during the Tertiary, covering large swathes of southern Småland and nearby areas in Southern Sweden. To the east the South Småland peneplain bounds with the Sub-Cambrian peneplain uphill across an escarpment. While is almost as flat as the Sub-Cambrian peneplain the South Småland peneplain differs in that it contain far more residual hills and that it has never been covered by sedimentary rocks. To the south and west the peneplain transitions into Mesozoic-aged hilly surfaces.

Paleic surface

The paleic surface or palaeic surface is an erosion surface of gentle slopes that exist in South Norway. Parts of it are a continuation of the Sub-Cambrian peneplain and Muddus Plains found further east or equivalent to the strandflat coastal plains of Norway. Hardangervidda, a particularly flat and elevated part of the Paleic surface formed in the Miocene at sea level.

An etchplain is a plain where the bedrock has been subject to considerable "etching" or subsurface weathering. Etchplanation is the process forming etchplains. Contrary to what the name might suggest, etchplains are seldom completely flat and usually display some relief, as weathering of the bedrock does not advance uniformly. This means that weathering is unrelated to the flatness which might be derivative of various other processes of planation including peneplanation and pediplanation. Erosion of etchplains can result in the exposure of inselbergs such as bornhardt and tors. Generally the topography exposed at a stripped etchplain, that is an etch surface, after erosion of regolith is one with many irregularities as result of structurally defined areas of rock strength.

Sub-Mesozoic hilly peneplains A landscape in Scandinavia of undulating hills and joint valleys

The Sub-Mesozoic hilly peneplains or Sub-Mesozoic hilly relief is a landscape in Scandinavia made up of undulating hills and joint valleys and occasional kaolinized bedrock in valley bottoms. The landscape formed in the Mesozoic Era and was eventually drowned by the sea during the Campanian transgression and covered by a thick cover of Cretaceous sedimentary rocks. Later erosion of the cover rocks partly re-exposed this landscape. During the Quaternary epoch the re-exposed Mesozoic hilly relief escaped major glacier erosion being only surficially scoured in parts.

References

  1. 1 2 Harris, Stuart A. (1968). "Treppen concept (penck)". Geomorphology. Encyclopedia of Earth Science. ISBN   978-3-540-31060-0.
  2. Young, R.W. (2004). "Escarpment". In Goudie, A.S. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Geomorphology. pp. 337–340.
  3. Spreitzer, H. (1951). "Die Piedmonttreppen in der regionalen Geomorphologie". Erdkunde (in German). 5 (4): 294–305. JSTOR   25635740.
  4. Lidmar-Bergström, Karna; Olvmo, Mats; Bonow, Johan M. (2017). "The South Swedish Dome: a key structure for identification of peneplains and conclusions on Phanerozoic tectonics of an ancient shield". GFF .
  5. Holtedahl, Olaf (1965). "The South-Norwegian Piedmonttreppe of W. Evers". Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift . 20 (3–4): 74–84. doi:10.1080/00291956508551831.
  6. Redfied, T.F.; Osmundsen, P.T. (2013). "The long-term topographic response of a continent adjacent to a hyperextended margin: A case study from Scandinavia". GSA Bulletin. 125 (1): 184–200. doi:10.1130/B30691.1.