Abstract

ABSTRACTNorth‐central Poland was originally shaped by the Płock lobe of the ice sheet formed during the Weichselian Glaciation. The majority of the studied area comprises the Dobrzyń Lakeland, where numerous terminal moraine hills preserve a record of recession of the ice sheet from the maximum extent of the last glaciation (LGM). Analysis of a digital elevation model enabled the determination of a network of morpholineaments, referring to the formation of linear glacial forms. Recession of the ice sheet from the LGM extent in north‐central Poland was uneven and proceeded in stages. Ice‐sheet recession stages were interspersed with local or regional ice‐sheet advance stages. During these individual periods of ice‐sheet behaviour, ice‐sheet movement changed direction from WNW–ESE to NNW–SSE. Transgression of the ice sheet into the central part of the study area as well as the Kujawy–Dobrzyń subphase may be related to cooling of the climate during 18.5–17.7 ka before ad 2000.

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