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Want to know more? Ice-age Bergslagen
Sweden’s topography has been moulded and formed by
earthquakes and volcanoes. The heating of the Earth’s crust, the
presence of enormous pressure, and a variety of chemical processes—all
these combined to convert old rock forms to new ones. Iron ore was formed
by chemical compounds that were made during volcanic eruptions that occurred
more than 1.8 billion years ago, when the planet was in its infancy. Copper,
zinc and lead were also created at that time. So the rock formations in
Sweden are the result of a long, natural process in which geological changes
occurred frequently.
When we talk about the ice age, we usually mean the most
recent glacial period, which started some 70,000 years ago and ended about
8,500 years ago. But even during a glacial period, changes in climate
can still occur. In the last glacial period, "short" periods
when the climate was warmer occurred when parts of the country were ice
free. The greatest spread of the latest glaciers occurred 20,000 years
ago, reaching as far south as north Germany, and Poland. After that, the
ice started to melt. The south of Sweden became ice free about 12,000
years ago and, 3,000 years later, the ice in the Bergslagen region had
also receded.
The glacier carried away the old surface and sheared off
boulders from the crust beneath. Everything became frozen fast in the
glacier and was crushed into pieces of all different sizes, from large
boulders down to particles of clay only thousandths of a millimetre in
size. This mixture or mass of debris is called moraine. After the ice
had receded, the moraine was left in a largely continuous layer over the
crust of the Earth.
The meltwater collected in icy rivers that rushed through
tunnels below and through the ice. Any moraine that was in the path of
the water was picked up and carried along to the snout of the glacier.
During this journey, the particles became smooth and rounded and were
naturally sorted by size by the flow of the river.
The heaviest deposits, boulders, rock, gravel and sand, were
left on the bottom of the ice tunnels, close to the snout of the glacier,
whilst lighter particles were carried further away by the flow of water
known as glacier milk. As the ice receded further north, boulder ridges,
gravel hills, deltas and other features sprang up. The gravel and sand
contained in the glacial boulder ridges are of great economic importance,
but the ridges also serve as important historical monuments.
When the glacier milk or river flowed out into the sea, the
heavier particles sank in the estuary. Particles of clay, on the other
hand, remained in suspension, swirling around in the water for a long
time, and then being spread and deposited over a wide area. These deposits
now constitute our most fertile arable land.
As we have already seen, glaciers melt from south to north
and, as they did, icebergs would break away and be carried into the Baltic
Sea and up as far as Riddarhyttan. This is where the sea ended: but the
glacier continued to melt on land. As it did, it gradually changed its
shape: from exhibiting a steep, almost vertical form it changed into a
low, sloping promontory. This process of change, of course, took time
(geological time). The edge of the glacier thus remained at Riddarhyttan
for a long period and it is this geological event that has left such a
wealth of natural features to be seen around what is now lake Lien.
Where the glacier milk—the river—flowed out into
shallow water, it created a bay in the ice. Since the glacier remained
in place here for a long time, large quantities of gravel and sand were
deposited in the river estuary. Eventually, the accumulated deposits in
the estuary broke through the surface of the bay, leaving the hilly delta
known to Swedish geologists as the Riddarhytte field.
Large icebergs became grounded on the sea bottom and embedded
in the sand and gravel. After the glacier had completely melted away,
and the land had risen out of the sea, a shifting vista of hills and valleys
could be seen. Great hollows and depressions appeared where the icebergs
had been left stranded. Where sand and gravel had settled, the topography
consisted of ridges, hills and plateaux. It can all be seen clearly from
the ground and the vista is a sharp reminder of the natural history of
the land.
It was the melting of the glacier, and the rising of the
land out of the sea, that created lake Lien.
Once the ice had fully receded, the pressure it had exerted
was relieved, and the land started to rise. Those areas that rose out
of the sea exhibit fairly clear signs of the swell, the rise and fall
of the sea, and its influence on the shore. The highest shorelines, together
with the height of some of the glacial deltas, constitute what is called
the "highest coastline" (HK), which is an important geological
limit and an important landmark in natural history. Land above this level
largely consists of moraine (or till), while the land below the HK is
made up mainly of fine-grained soils.
And the land is still rising, even today. In central Sweden,
the height of the land increases by 4–5 mm a year along the coast
of Ångermansland, and by 10 mm a year at Höga kusten. Movement
of the land is probably also caused by movements inside the Earth’s
crust.
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