{"title":"Update of the seamless 1:500 000 scale geological map of Greenland based on recent field work in the Wandel Sea Basin, eastern North Greenland","authors":"K. Svennevig","doi":"10.34194/geusb.v41.4337","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Geological maps are core products of national geological surveys and represent the sum of geological knowledge of any given area. However, dedicated and extensive mapping projects in the Arctic are mostly a thing of the past due to difficulty in financing such costly basic research efforts. Today, an overview of the geology of Greenland is portrayed by a seamless digital 1:500 000 scale geological map (Kokfelt et al. 2013; Pedersen et al. 2013), based on printed maps on this scale produced since 1982 by the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS; see Holst et al. 2013). The digital map now makes it possible to update smaller areas with new, published or otherwise quality-controlled geological data (e.g. Kolb et al. 2016). This ensures that the map reflects the current state of geological knowledge without undertaking extensive new mapping to update individual map sheets, as has previously been the modus operandi. An online version of the map is available from www.greenmin.dk/map. However, procedures are required to ensure that updates are carried out routinely and that the quality and coherence of the updated map is of the Survey’s standards. Results of recent field work in the Wandel Sea Basin (Fig. 1) and in particular the publication of a new geological map sheet Kilen on a scale of 1:100 000 (Svennevig in press) have implications for the geology shown on the above mentioned 1:500 000 scale seamless geological map of Greenland. The post-Devonian part of this map in eastern North Greenland has been updated according to the results of studies published since the publication of the original printed maps (Bengaard & Henriksen 1986; Jepsen 2000). The changes do not call for an update of the 1:2 500 000 scale geological map of Greenland (Henriksen et al. 2009).","PeriodicalId":49199,"journal":{"name":"Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin","volume":"33 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-08-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.34194/geusb.v41.4337","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Earth and Planetary Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
Abstract
Geological maps are core products of national geological surveys and represent the sum of geological knowledge of any given area. However, dedicated and extensive mapping projects in the Arctic are mostly a thing of the past due to difficulty in financing such costly basic research efforts. Today, an overview of the geology of Greenland is portrayed by a seamless digital 1:500 000 scale geological map (Kokfelt et al. 2013; Pedersen et al. 2013), based on printed maps on this scale produced since 1982 by the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS; see Holst et al. 2013). The digital map now makes it possible to update smaller areas with new, published or otherwise quality-controlled geological data (e.g. Kolb et al. 2016). This ensures that the map reflects the current state of geological knowledge without undertaking extensive new mapping to update individual map sheets, as has previously been the modus operandi. An online version of the map is available from www.greenmin.dk/map. However, procedures are required to ensure that updates are carried out routinely and that the quality and coherence of the updated map is of the Survey’s standards. Results of recent field work in the Wandel Sea Basin (Fig. 1) and in particular the publication of a new geological map sheet Kilen on a scale of 1:100 000 (Svennevig in press) have implications for the geology shown on the above mentioned 1:500 000 scale seamless geological map of Greenland. The post-Devonian part of this map in eastern North Greenland has been updated according to the results of studies published since the publication of the original printed maps (Bengaard & Henriksen 1986; Jepsen 2000). The changes do not call for an update of the 1:2 500 000 scale geological map of Greenland (Henriksen et al. 2009).
地质图是国家地质调查的核心成果,是某一地区地质知识的总和。然而,由于难以为如此昂贵的基础研究工作提供资金,北极地区专门和广泛的测绘项目大多已成为过去。如今,一张1:50万比例尺的无缝数字地质图描绘了格陵兰岛的地质概况(Kokfelt et al. 2013;Pedersen et al. 2013),基于1982年以来丹麦和格陵兰地质调查局(GEUS;参见Holst et al. 2013)。数字地图现在可以用新的、已发布的或其他质量控制的地质数据更新较小的区域(例如Kolb et al. 2016)。这确保了地图反映了地质知识的现状,而不必像以前那样进行大量的新测绘来更新单个地图。该地图的在线版本可从www.greenmin.dk/map获得。但是,需要制定程序以确保定期进行更新,并确保更新地图的质量和一致性符合调查的标准。最近在Wandel海盆地的实地工作结果(图1),特别是以1:10万比例尺的Kilen新地质图的出版(Svennevig出版社),对上述1:50万比例尺格陵兰无缝地质图上显示的地质有影响。这张地图在北格陵兰岛东部的后泥盆纪部分已经根据原始印刷地图出版以来发表的研究结果进行了更新(Bengaard & Henriksen 1986;Jepsen 2000)。这些变化不需要更新格陵兰1:25万比例尺的地质图(Henriksen等人,2009年)。
期刊介绍:
GEUS Bulletin publishes geoscience research papers, monographs and map descriptions with a focus on Denmark, Greenland and the wider North Atlantic and Arctic region. We welcome submissions that fit this remit. Specifically, we publish:
1.Short articles intended as rapid communications that are of immediate interest to the international geoscience community (these include new research, datasets, methods or reviews)
2.Regular-length articles that document new research or a review of a topic of interest
3.Monographs (single volume works, by arrangement with the editorial office)
4.Maps and descriptive texts (produced by GEUS for Greenland and Denmark, by arrangement with the editorial office)
GEUS Bulletin serves a broad geoscientific readership from research, industry, government agencies, NGOs and special interest groups.