Ancylus lake is a name given by geologists to the body of fresh water that replaced the Yoldia sea after the latter had been severed from its saline intake across central Sweden by the isostatic rise of south Scandinavian landforms. The dates are approximately 9500-8000 BP calibrated, during the full Boreal period. The lake became Littorina Sea when rising oceanic levels broke through the Great Belt.
The lake was named by Gerard de Geer after Ancylus fluviatilis, a gastropod found in its sediments.
The result of increasing lake levels was the Ancylus transgression, a general flooding around its shores, 9500-9200 BP. By this time a somewhat larger Gulf of Bothnia and parts of Norway were free of ice, while the Rovaniemi region of Finland appeared no later than 9000 BP, despite the new flooding.
Accelerated melting and landforms rebounding at different rates in different locations led to some instability. By 9200 BC the lake rose over the Dars sill and cut a new channel in the vicinity of what is now the Great Belt, which some geologists call the Dana river. For a time, Skäne, or southern Sweden, was an island once more, from about 9200 to no later than 8000 BP. The lake level began to drop.
In Lapland Mesolithic fishers, hunters and probably herders found pine-birch forest with tundra-like open spaces. In addition to pinus and betula were aspen, alder, willow, crowberries, grass and sedge. Much of the new Finnish land was covered by mire. Moraine ridges and drumlins formed an extensive island system. The shores around the lake were stony ground.
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