A layer or series of layers of sediment deposited in a body of still water in one year.
[Swedish varv, layer, from varva, to bend, from Old Norse hverfa.]
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A layer or series of layers of sediment deposited in a body of still water in one year.
[Swedish varv, layer, from varva, to bend, from Old Norse hverfa.]
Any of a variety of distinct sediment laminations or beds deposited within the span of a single year. They are formed commonly in saline or fresh-water lakes, but examples from marine environments are known as well. Usually, varves occur in repetitive series and thus comprise vertical sequences of annual cyclic deposits. Varves range in thickness from less than a millimeter (0.04 in.) to over a meter (3 ft), but typically are a few millimeters or centimeters thick.
The classic varves are found in glacial lake sediments formed during the Pleistocene ice ages. These glacial varves occur typically as couplets of light-colored silt or sand and dark clay. The relatively coarse silt-sand layers are formed during the warm summer months when meltwater inflows and sediment yields to the lake are large. During winter when meltwater inflow is greatly reduced or stopped, the fine-grained clay settles slowly to the lake bottom to deposit the fine, dark winter layer of the varve. Similar varved sediments are found commonly in modern glacier-fed lakes that undergo large seasonal variations in inflow. See also Pleistocene.
Varves can be used as tools for correlation as well as for chronological reconstructions. In addition to their use in dating sedimentary deposits, varves have been used to investigate sedimentation rates, cyclic deposition, climate variations, glacial histories, and as standards of comparison for other dating techniques. Varves have been identified occasionally in ancient sedimentary rocks. See also Dating methods; Glacial epoch; Marine sediments; Sedimentary rocks; Sedimentology.
A pair of coarse and fine deposits which reflect seasonal deposition of glacial debris deposited in proglacial lakes. A varve couplet represents the total fluvio-glacial deposition on a lake floor for one year. Summer deposition brings coarse sediments from meltwater streams; such sediments are from silt to sand in size. In winter the lake surface is frozen so that the water is calm. Under these still conditions, the fine deposits settle out in a thinner layer than that of the summer sediments. Analysis of a series of varves may help in the reconstruction of climatic changes during glaciation.
Laminated lake sediment showing alternating layers of coarse and fine mud laid down over the course of a single year as a result of seasonal fluctuations in the sediment load of water courses emptying into the lake. The kind of sediment depends on the proximity of glaciers and local climatic conditions. Varved sediments typically preserve excellent environmental sequences providing palaeoenvironmental contexts for local archaeological sites, including evidence for progressive changes in vegetation, forest fires, and the effects of human communities on soil erosion and run-off regimes within the catchment. Varves provide high-quality geochronological resolution to the environmental data through varve analysis.
A varve is an annual layer of sediment or sedimentary rock.
The word Varve is derived from the Swedish word varv whose meanings and connotations include revolution, in layers, and circle. The term first appeared as Hvarfig lera (varved clay) on the first map produced by the Geological Survey of Sweden in 1862. Initially, varve was used to describe the separate components of annual layers in glacial lake sediments, but at the 1910 Geological Congress, the Swedish geologist Gerard De Geer (1858-1943) proposed a new formal definition where varve described the whole of any annual sedimentary layer. More recently introduced terms such as annually laminated are synonymous with varve.
Of the many rhythmites found in the geological record, varves are one of the most important and illuminating to studies of past climate change. Varves are amongst the smallest-scale events recognised in stratigraphy.
Although the term varve was not introduced until the late nineteenth century, the concept of an annual rhythm of deposition is at least two centuries old. In the 1840s, Hitchcock suspected laminated sediment in North America could be seasonal, and in 1884 Warren Upham postulated that light-dark laminated couplets represented a single years deposition. Despite these early forays, the chief pioneer and populariser of varve research was Gerard De Geer. While working for the Geological Survey of Sweden, De Geer noticed a close visual similarity between the laminated sediments he was mapping, and tree-rings. This prompted him to suggest the coarse-fine couplets frequently found in the sediments of glacial lakes were annual layers.
The first varve chronology was constructed by De Geer in Stockholm in the late 19th century. Further work soon followed, and a network of sites along the east coast of Sweden was established. The varved sediments exposed in these sites had formed in glaciolacustrine and glacimarine conditions in the Baltic basin as the last ice sheet retreated northwards. By 1914, De Geer had discovered that it was possible to compare varve sequences across long distances by matching variations in varve thickness, and distinct marker laminae. However, this discovery led De Geer and many of his co-workers to making incorrect correlations, which they called 'teleconnections', between continents, a process criticised by other varve pioneers like Ernst Antevs.
In 1924 a special laboratory dedicated to varve research - the Geochronological Institute - was established. De Geer and his
co-workers and students made trips to other countries and continents to investigate varved sediments. Ernst Antevs studied sites
from
1940 saw the publication of a now classic scientific paper by De Geer, the Geochronologia Suecica, in which he presented the Swedish Time Scale, a floating varve chronology for ice recession from Skåne to Indalsälven. Lidén made the first attempts to link this time scale with the present day. Since then, there have been revisions as new sites are discovered, and old ones reassessed. At present, the Swedish varve chronology is based on thousands of sites, and covers 13,200 varve years.
Varves form in a variety of marine and lacustrine depositional environments from seasonal variation in clastic, biological, and chemical sedimentary processes.
The classic varve archetype is a light / dark coloured couplet deposited in a glacial lake. The light layer usually comprises a coarser laminaset of silt and fine sand deposited under higher energy conditions when meltwater introduces sediment load into the lake water. During winter months, when meltwater and associated suspended sediment input is reduced, and often when the lake surface freezes, fine clay-size sediment is deposited forming a dark coloured laminaset.
In addition to seasonal variation of sedimentary processes and deposition, varve formation requires the absence of bioturbation. Consequently, varves commonly form under anoxic conditions.
A well-known marine example of varve sediments are those found in the Santa Barbara basin, off California. [1]
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