Construction of hydrostratigraphic subsurface models of the Northwest German Basin: input for numerical simulation of subglacial erosion during past and future glaciations

Publikation: KonferenzbeitragAbstractForschungPeer-Review

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OriginalspracheEnglisch
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 14 März 2025
VeranstaltungEGU General Assembly 2025 - Vienna International Centre (VIC) und Online, Wien, Österreich
Dauer: 27 Apr. 20252 Mai 2025
https://www.egu25.eu/

Konferenz

KonferenzEGU General Assembly 2025
KurztitelEGU2025
Land/GebietÖsterreich
OrtWien
Zeitraum27 Apr. 20252 Mai 2025
Internetadresse

Abstract

Large volumes of glacial meltwater drain along the interface between the ice sheet and its bed, thereby influencing glacier dynamics. It is known from the geological record and modern glacial systems that channelized subglacial meltwater discharge generates high erosion rates, leading to the formation of overdeepenings and tunnel valleys, some over 500 m deep. It is therefore essential to constrain the depth of potential subglacial erosion under future ice sheets when searching for locations of high-level radioactive waste repository sites. The aim of this project is to quantify the meltwater-driven erosion under the past ice sheets in northern Germany and evaluate the erosion potential during future glaciations. To achieve this goal, we develop a next-generation dynamic numerical model simulating subglacial meltwater erosion on soft beds. In the first step, we built subsurface reservoir models at different scales and resolutions to examine the impact of model resolution on the subsequent erosion modelling. The 3D subsurface model approximately covers the area of the Northwest German Basin (40,000 km²), has a depth of 2000 m, and comprises lithostratigraphical units from the Permian Zechstein to the Pleistocene. The basin fill has a complex structure due to salt tectonics, and the main challenge was to generalize the complex lateral and vertical lithofacies/hydrofacies relationships. Two large-scale, low-resolution subsurface reservoir models were constructed. The first model does not include Quaternary deposits. This model was created to simulate the formation of Middle Pleistocene tunnel valleys and compare/validate the results with the Pleistocene record of the Northwest German Basin. The second large-scale subsurface model includes the Quaternary deposits and will be used to simulate subglacial erosion during future glaciations. A smaller high-resolution subsurface model, covering an area of about 2000 km², will then be used to test the effects of model size and model resolution on the simulation of subglacial erosion.

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Construction of hydrostratigraphic subsurface models of the Northwest German Basin: input for numerical simulation of subglacial erosion during past and future glaciations. / Fälber, Runa; Jungdal-Olesen, Gustav; Pedersen, Vivi Kathrine et al.
2025. Abstract von EGU General Assembly 2025, Wien, Österreich.

Publikation: KonferenzbeitragAbstractForschungPeer-Review

Fälber R, Jungdal-Olesen G, Pedersen VK, Damsgaard A, Piotrowski J, Brandes C et al.. Construction of hydrostratigraphic subsurface models of the Northwest German Basin: input for numerical simulation of subglacial erosion during past and future glaciations. 2025. Abstract von EGU General Assembly 2025, Wien, Österreich. doi: 10.5194/egusphere-egu25-1788
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title = "Construction of hydrostratigraphic subsurface models of the Northwest German Basin: input for numerical simulation of subglacial erosion during past and future glaciations",
abstract = "Large volumes of glacial meltwater drain along the interface between the ice sheet and its bed, thereby influencing glacier dynamics. It is known from the geological record and modern glacial systems that channelized subglacial meltwater discharge generates high erosion rates, leading to the formation of overdeepenings and tunnel valleys, some over 500 m deep. It is therefore essential to constrain the depth of potential subglacial erosion under future ice sheets when searching for locations of high-level radioactive waste repository sites. The aim of this project is to quantify the meltwater-driven erosion under the past ice sheets in northern Germany and evaluate the erosion potential during future glaciations. To achieve this goal, we develop a next-generation dynamic numerical model simulating subglacial meltwater erosion on soft beds. In the first step, we built subsurface reservoir models at different scales and resolutions to examine the impact of model resolution on the subsequent erosion modelling. The 3D subsurface model approximately covers the area of the Northwest German Basin (40,000 km²), has a depth of 2000 m, and comprises lithostratigraphical units from the Permian Zechstein to the Pleistocene. The basin fill has a complex structure due to salt tectonics, and the main challenge was to generalize the complex lateral and vertical lithofacies/hydrofacies relationships. Two large-scale, low-resolution subsurface reservoir models were constructed. The first model does not include Quaternary deposits. This model was created to simulate the formation of Middle Pleistocene tunnel valleys and compare/validate the results with the Pleistocene record of the Northwest German Basin. The second large-scale subsurface model includes the Quaternary deposits and will be used to simulate subglacial erosion during future glaciations. A smaller high-resolution subsurface model, covering an area of about 2000 km², will then be used to test the effects of model size and model resolution on the simulation of subglacial erosion.",
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TY - CONF

T1 - Construction of hydrostratigraphic subsurface models of the Northwest German Basin

T2 - EGU General Assembly 2025

AU - Fälber, Runa

AU - Jungdal-Olesen, Gustav

AU - Pedersen, Vivi Kathrine

AU - Damsgaard, Anders

AU - Piotrowski, Jan

AU - Brandes, Christian

AU - Winsemann, Jutta

PY - 2025/3/14

Y1 - 2025/3/14

N2 - Large volumes of glacial meltwater drain along the interface between the ice sheet and its bed, thereby influencing glacier dynamics. It is known from the geological record and modern glacial systems that channelized subglacial meltwater discharge generates high erosion rates, leading to the formation of overdeepenings and tunnel valleys, some over 500 m deep. It is therefore essential to constrain the depth of potential subglacial erosion under future ice sheets when searching for locations of high-level radioactive waste repository sites. The aim of this project is to quantify the meltwater-driven erosion under the past ice sheets in northern Germany and evaluate the erosion potential during future glaciations. To achieve this goal, we develop a next-generation dynamic numerical model simulating subglacial meltwater erosion on soft beds. In the first step, we built subsurface reservoir models at different scales and resolutions to examine the impact of model resolution on the subsequent erosion modelling. The 3D subsurface model approximately covers the area of the Northwest German Basin (40,000 km²), has a depth of 2000 m, and comprises lithostratigraphical units from the Permian Zechstein to the Pleistocene. The basin fill has a complex structure due to salt tectonics, and the main challenge was to generalize the complex lateral and vertical lithofacies/hydrofacies relationships. Two large-scale, low-resolution subsurface reservoir models were constructed. The first model does not include Quaternary deposits. This model was created to simulate the formation of Middle Pleistocene tunnel valleys and compare/validate the results with the Pleistocene record of the Northwest German Basin. The second large-scale subsurface model includes the Quaternary deposits and will be used to simulate subglacial erosion during future glaciations. A smaller high-resolution subsurface model, covering an area of about 2000 km², will then be used to test the effects of model size and model resolution on the simulation of subglacial erosion.

AB - Large volumes of glacial meltwater drain along the interface between the ice sheet and its bed, thereby influencing glacier dynamics. It is known from the geological record and modern glacial systems that channelized subglacial meltwater discharge generates high erosion rates, leading to the formation of overdeepenings and tunnel valleys, some over 500 m deep. It is therefore essential to constrain the depth of potential subglacial erosion under future ice sheets when searching for locations of high-level radioactive waste repository sites. The aim of this project is to quantify the meltwater-driven erosion under the past ice sheets in northern Germany and evaluate the erosion potential during future glaciations. To achieve this goal, we develop a next-generation dynamic numerical model simulating subglacial meltwater erosion on soft beds. In the first step, we built subsurface reservoir models at different scales and resolutions to examine the impact of model resolution on the subsequent erosion modelling. The 3D subsurface model approximately covers the area of the Northwest German Basin (40,000 km²), has a depth of 2000 m, and comprises lithostratigraphical units from the Permian Zechstein to the Pleistocene. The basin fill has a complex structure due to salt tectonics, and the main challenge was to generalize the complex lateral and vertical lithofacies/hydrofacies relationships. Two large-scale, low-resolution subsurface reservoir models were constructed. The first model does not include Quaternary deposits. This model was created to simulate the formation of Middle Pleistocene tunnel valleys and compare/validate the results with the Pleistocene record of the Northwest German Basin. The second large-scale subsurface model includes the Quaternary deposits and will be used to simulate subglacial erosion during future glaciations. A smaller high-resolution subsurface model, covering an area of about 2000 km², will then be used to test the effects of model size and model resolution on the simulation of subglacial erosion.

KW - hydrostraigraphic modelling

KW - subsurface modelling

KW - 3D geology

U2 - 10.5194/egusphere-egu25-1788

DO - 10.5194/egusphere-egu25-1788

M3 - Abstract

Y2 - 27 April 2025 through 2 May 2025

ER -

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