282 results on '"Larter, Robert D."'
Search Results
252. Neogene interaction of tectonic and glacial processes at the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula
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MacDonald, D.I.M., Larter, Robert D., Barker, Peter F., MacDonald, D.I.M., Larter, Robert D., and Barker, Peter F.
- Abstract
The Antarctic Peninsula was a magmatic arc subducting Pacific Ocean floor throughout the Mesozoic. During the Cenozoic, subduction ceased at each of a series of ridge‐crest–trench collisions, which migrated northeast along the margin. Multichannel seismic profiles across the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula show evidence of post‐collision uplift, followed by subsidence. During Pliocene–Pleistocene time, ice sheets have grounded out to the shelf edge at times of glacial maximum, transporting sediment that has extended the outer shelf. Subsidence of the margin has preserved a unique sedimentary record of ice‐sheet advances, which provides the opportunity of looking closely at the hypothesized relationship between change in grounded ice volume and global sea‐level change.
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- 1991
253. The depositional pattern and distribution of glacial-interglacial sequences on the Antarctic Peninsula Pacific margin
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Larter, Robert D, primary and Cunningham, Alex P, additional
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- 1993
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254. Effects of ridge crest‐trench interaction on Antarctic‐Phoenix Spreading: Forces on a young subducting plate
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Larter, Robert D., primary and Barker, Peter F., additional
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- 1991
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255. Basal Melting, Roughness and Structural Integrity of Ice Shelves
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Larter, Robert D.
- Abstract
Ice shelves restrict outflow from many of the largest glaciers in Antarctica, thus limiting the Antarctic contribution to sea‐level rise. However, past ice‐shelf collapse events show they are highly vulnerable to surface and basal melting. Collapse of ice shelves in front of glaciers flowing on retrograde slopes could initiate runaway retreat processes. Difficulty in projecting how quickly these could play out makes dynamic ice loss from Antarctica the largest uncertainty in predicting future sea‐level rise. Basal melting can impact structural integrity of ice shelves in several ways. Results from analyses of variations in ice‐shelf roughness by Watkins et al. (2021; https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL094743) raise the tantalizing prospect that this may provide a simple quantitative measure of how the structural integrity of an ice shelf has been impacted by basal melting. Applying the method to additional ice shelves would be useful to examine how other factors may contribute to roughness. In many places around Antarctica, and some around Greenland, glaciers flowing on beds that are hundreds of meters below sea level continue out over the sea for some distance, forming “ice shelves”. Over the past 40 years, break‐up of several ice shelves has been observed and shown to result from melting on their surface and/or at their base. Subsequent increases in the flow speed of glaciers that flowed into them confirmed that ice shelves restrict outflow of glaciers and thus limit their contribution to sea‐level rise. Furthermore, changes resulting from removal of ice shelves could lead to runaway retreat of glaciers flowing on beds that get deeper upstream, and lack of knowledge about whether and how quickly this will happen is the largest uncertainty in predicting future sea‐level rise. Basal melting weakens ice shelves in several ways. Results from analyses of variations in thickness, or “roughness”, of ice shelves by Watkins et al. (2021; https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL094743) suggest that they may provide a measure of the extent to which basal melting has weakened an ice shelf. Conducting similar analyses on additional ice shelves would help show the extent to which other processes contribute to roughness. Ice shelves restrict glacier flow but are vulnerable to environmental changeBasal melting can impact the structural integrity of ice shelves in several waysA new study suggests that ice‐shelf roughness may provide a measure of the extent to which basal melting has impacted structural integrity Ice shelves restrict glacier flow but are vulnerable to environmental change Basal melting can impact the structural integrity of ice shelves in several ways A new study suggests that ice‐shelf roughness may provide a measure of the extent to which basal melting has impacted structural integrity
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- 2022
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256. Swirls and scoops: Ice base melt revealed by multibeam imagery of an Antarctic ice shelf.
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Wåhlin, Anna, Alley, Karen E., Begeman, Carolyn, Hegrenæs, Øyvind, Xiaohan Yuan, Graham, Alastair G. C., Hogan, Kelly, Davis, Peter E. D., Dotto, Tiago S., Eayrs, Clare, Hall, Robert A., Holland, David M., Tae Wan Kim, Larter, Robert D., Li Ling, Muto, Atsuhiro, Pettit, Erin C., Schmidt, Britney E., Snow, Tasha, and Stedt, Filip
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ICE shelves , *ANTARCTIC ice , *MELTING , *SEA level , *SUBGLACIAL lakes , *WATER springs - Abstract
Knowledge gaps about how the ocean melts Antarctica's ice shelves, borne from a lack of observations, lead to large uncertainties in sea level predictions. Using high-resolution maps of the underside of Dotson Ice Shelf, West Antarctica, we reveal the imprint that ice shelf basal melting leaves on the ice. Convection and intermittent warm water intrusions form widespread terraced features through slow melting in quiescent areas, while shear-driven turbulence rapidly melts smooth, eroded topographies in outflow areas, as well as enigmatic teardrop-shaped indentations that result from boundary-layer flow rotation. Full-thickness ice fractures, with bases modified by basal melting and convective processes, are observed throughout the area. This new wealth of processes, all active under a single ice shelf, must be considered to accurately predict future Antarctic ice shelf melt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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257. Tunnel valley infill and genesis revealed by high-resolution 3-D seismic data.
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Kirkham, James D., Hogan, Kelly A., Larter, Robert D., Self, Ed, Games, Ken, Huuse, Mads, Stewart, Margaret A., Ottesen, Dag, Arnold, Neil S., and Dowdeswell, Julian A.
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MELTWATER , *SEISMIC reflection method , *GLACIAL landforms , *ICE sheets , *VALLEYS , *HYDROLOGY , *LANDFORMS - Abstract
Landforms produced beneath former ice sheets offer insights into inaccessible subglacial processes and present analogues for how current ice masses may evolve in a warming climate. Large subglacial channels cut by meltwater erosion (tunnel valleys [TVs]) have the potential to provide valuable empirical constraints for numerical ice-sheet models concerning realistic melt rates, water routing, and the interplay between basal hydrology and ice dynamics. However, the information gleaned from these features has thus far been limited by an inability to adequately resolve their internal structures. We use high-resolution three-dimensional (HR3-D) seismic data (6.25 m bin size, ~4 m vertical resolution) to analyze the infill of buried TVs in the North Sea. The HR3-D seismic data represent a step-change in our ability to investigate the mechanisms and rates at which TVs are formed and filled. Over 40% of the TVs examined contain buried glacial landforms including eskers, crevasse-squeeze ridges, glacitectonic structures, and kettle holes. As most of these landforms had not previously been detected using conventional 3-D seismic reflection methods, the mechanisms that formed them are currently absent from models of TV genesis. The ability to observe such intricate internal structures opens the possibility of using TVs to reconstruct the hydrological regimes of former mid-latitude ice sheets as analogues for contemporary ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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258. Seismic stratigraphy of the Antarctic Peninsula Pacific margin: A record of Pliocene-Pleistocene ice volume and paleoclimate
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Larter, Robert D., Barker, Peter F., Larter, Robert D., and Barker, Peter F.
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Multichannel seismic profiles across the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula show a series of oblique progradational sequences. These sequences exhibit a variety of unusual characteristics that suggest they were produced by the action of ice sheets grounded out to the shelf edge at times of glacial maximum. Reflection events from deeper stratigraphic levels, followed down the continental slope and onto the rise, overlie ocean crust of known age, showing that at least eight such glacial sequences have been deposited within the past 6 m.y. Similar groundings have probably occurred on most Antarctic margins, but the depositional record is particularly well preserved at this margin because of Pliocene-Pleistocene thermal subsidence. Neogene global sea-level fluctuations have been attributed to changes in volume of continental ice sheets. The depositional sequences on the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula are thought to record West Antarctic ice-sheet fluctuations directly. Further investigation of these sequences would assess the relation between fluctuations in ice volume and the low-latitude record of global sea-level change.
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- 1989
259. West Antarctic Ice Sheet retreat driven by Holocene warm water incursions
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Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Smith, James A, Hodell, David A, Greaves, Mervyn, Poole, Christopher R, Kender, Sev, Williams, Mark, Andersen, Thorbjørn Joest, Jernas, Patrycja E, Elderfield, Henry, Klages, Johann P, Roberts, Stephen J, Gohl, Karsten, Larter, Robert D, and Kuhn, Gerhard
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Geologic Sediments ,Hot Temperature ,Oceans and Seas ,Antarctic Regions ,Reproducibility of Results ,History, 19th Century ,Foraminifera ,Wind ,History, 20th Century ,Models, Theoretical ,Global Warming ,History, 21st Century ,13. Climate action ,Freezing ,Ice Cover ,Seawater ,14. Life underwater ,History, Ancient - Abstract
Glaciological and oceanographic observations coupled with numerical models show that warm Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) incursions onto the West Antarctic continental shelf cause melting of the undersides of floating ice shelves. Because these ice shelves buttress glaciers feeding into them, their ocean-induced thinning is driving Antarctic ice-sheet retreat today. Here we present a multi-proxy data based reconstruction of variability in CDW inflow to the Amundsen Sea sector, the most vulnerable part of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, during the Holocene epoch (from 11.7 thousand years ago to the present). The chemical compositions of foraminifer shells and benthic foraminifer assemblages in marine sediments indicate that enhanced CDW upwelling, controlled by the latitudinal position of the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds, forced deglaciation of this sector from at least 10,400 years ago until 7,500 years ago-when an ice-shelf collapse may have caused rapid ice-sheet thinning further upstream-and since the 1940s. These results increase confidence in the predictive capability of current ice-sheet models.
260. Past ice sheet–seabed interactions in the northeastern Weddell Sea embayment, Antarctica
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Arndt, Jan Erik, Larter, Robert D., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Sørli, Simon H., Forwick, Matthias, Smith, James A., and Wacker, Lukas
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13. Climate action ,14. Life underwater - Abstract
The Antarctic ice sheet extent in the Weddell Sea embayment (WSE) during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; ca. 19–25 calibrated kiloyears before present, ka cal BP) and its subsequent retreat from the shelf are poorly constrained, with two conflicting scenarios being discussed. Today, the modern Brunt Ice Shelf, the last remaining ice shelf in the northeastern WSE, is only pinned at a single location and recent crevasse development may lead to its rapid disintegration in the near future. We investigated the seafloor morphology on the northeastern WSE shelf and discuss its implications, in combination with marine geological records, to create reconstructions of the past behaviour of this sector of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS), including ice–seafloor interactions. Our data show that an ice stream flowed through Stancomb-Wills Trough and acted as the main conduit for EAIS drainage during the LGM in this sector. Post-LGM ice stream retreat occurred stepwise, with at least three documented grounding-line still-stands, and the trough had become free of grounded ice by ∼10.5 ka cal BP. In contrast, slow-flowing ice once covered the shelf in Brunt Basin and extended westwards toward McDonald Bank. During a later time period, only floating ice was present within Brunt Basin, but large “ice slabs” enclosed within the ice shelf occasionally ran aground at the eastern side of McDonald Bank, forming 10 unusual ramp-shaped seabed features. These ramps are the result of temporary ice shelf grounding events buttressing the ice further upstream. To the west of this area, Halley Trough very likely was free of grounded ice during the LGM, representing a potential refuge for benthic shelf fauna at this time., The Cryosphere, 14 (6), ISSN:1994-0416, ISSN:1994-0424
261. Sedimentary processes on the Antarctic Peninsula Pacific margin: new geophysical and sediment core data
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Larter, Robert D., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Graham, Alastair G. C., Hernández-Molina, F. J., Crowhurst, S. J., Hodell, D. A., Channell, J. E. T., Xuan, C., Allen, Claire, Ehrmann, Werner, Hogan, Kelly, Mccave, I. N., Sara Rodrigues, Williams, Maricel, Gohl, Karsten, Uenzelmann-Neben, Gabriele, and Rebesco, Michele
262. Geological Society of London Scientific Statement: what the geological record tells us about our present and future climate
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Lear, Caroline H., Anand, Pallavi, Blenkinsop, Tom, Foster, Gavin L., Gagan, Mary, Hoogakker, Babette, Larter, Robert D., Lunt, Daniel J., McCave, I. Nicholas., McClymont, Erin, Pancost, Richard D., Rickaby, Rosalind E. M., Schultz, David M., Summerhayes, Colin, Williams, Charles J. R., Zalasiewicz, Jan, Lear, Caroline H., Anand, Pallavi, Blenkinsop, Tom, Foster, Gavin L., Gagan, Mary, Hoogakker, Babette, Larter, Robert D., Lunt, Daniel J., McCave, I. Nicholas., McClymont, Erin, Pancost, Richard D., Rickaby, Rosalind E. M., Schultz, David M., Summerhayes, Colin, Williams, Charles J. R., and Zalasiewicz, Jan
- Abstract
Geology is the science of how the Earth functions and has evolved and, as such, it can contribute to our understanding of the climate system and how it responds to the addition of carbon dioxide (CO2) to the atmosphere and oceans. Observations from the geological record show that atmospheric CO2 concentrations are now at their highest levels in at least the past 3 million years. Furthermore, the current speed of human-induced CO2 change and warming is nearly without precedent in the entire geological record, with the only known exception being the instantaneous, meteorite-induced event that caused the extinction of non-bird-like dinosaurs 66 million years ago. In short, whilst atmospheric CO2 concentrations have varied dramatically during the geological past due to natural processes, and have often been higher than today, the current rate of CO2 (and therefore temperature) change is unprecedented in almost the entire geological past. The geological record shows that changes in temperature and greenhouse gas concentrations have direct impacts on sea-level, the hydrological cycle, marine and terrestrial ecosystems, and the acidification and oxygen depletion of the oceans. Important climate phenomena, such as the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the monsoons, which today affect the socio-economic stability and food and water security of billions of people, have varied markedly with past changes in climate. Climate reconstructions from around the globe show that climate change is not globally uniform, but tends to exhibit a consistent pattern, with changes at the poles larger than elsewhere. This polar amplification is seen in ancient warmer-than-modern time intervals like the Eocene epoch, about 50 million years ago and, more recently, in the Pliocene, about 3 million years ago. The warmest intervals of the Pliocene saw the disappearance of summer sea ice from the Arctic.
263. Geological Society of London Scientific Statement: what the geological record tells us about our present and future climate
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Lear, Caroline H., Anand, Pallavi, Blenkinsop, Tom, Foster, Gavin L., Gagan, Mary, Hoogakker, Babette, Larter, Robert D., Lunt, Daniel J., McCave, I. Nicholas., McClymont, Erin, Pancost, Richard D., Rickaby, Rosalind E. M., Schultz, David M., Summerhayes, Colin, Williams, Charles J. R., Zalasiewicz, Jan, Lear, Caroline H., Anand, Pallavi, Blenkinsop, Tom, Foster, Gavin L., Gagan, Mary, Hoogakker, Babette, Larter, Robert D., Lunt, Daniel J., McCave, I. Nicholas., McClymont, Erin, Pancost, Richard D., Rickaby, Rosalind E. M., Schultz, David M., Summerhayes, Colin, Williams, Charles J. R., and Zalasiewicz, Jan
- Abstract
Geology is the science of how the Earth functions and has evolved and, as such, it can contribute to our understanding of the climate system and how it responds to the addition of carbon dioxide (CO2) to the atmosphere and oceans. Observations from the geological record show that atmospheric CO2 concentrations are now at their highest levels in at least the past 3 million years. Furthermore, the current speed of human-induced CO2 change and warming is nearly without precedent in the entire geological record, with the only known exception being the instantaneous, meteorite-induced event that caused the extinction of non-bird-like dinosaurs 66 million years ago. In short, whilst atmospheric CO2 concentrations have varied dramatically during the geological past due to natural processes, and have often been higher than today, the current rate of CO2 (and therefore temperature) change is unprecedented in almost the entire geological past. The geological record shows that changes in temperature and greenhouse gas concentrations have direct impacts on sea-level, the hydrological cycle, marine and terrestrial ecosystems, and the acidification and oxygen depletion of the oceans. Important climate phenomena, such as the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the monsoons, which today affect the socio-economic stability and food and water security of billions of people, have varied markedly with past changes in climate. Climate reconstructions from around the globe show that climate change is not globally uniform, but tends to exhibit a consistent pattern, with changes at the poles larger than elsewhere. This polar amplification is seen in ancient warmer-than-modern time intervals like the Eocene epoch, about 50 million years ago and, more recently, in the Pliocene, about 3 million years ago. The warmest intervals of the Pliocene saw the disappearance of summer sea ice from the Arctic.
264. Synchronous retreat of Thwaites and Pine Island glaciers in response to external forcings in the presatellite era.
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Clark, Rachel W., Wellner, Julia S., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Totten, Rebecca L., Smith, James A., Miller, Lauren E., Larter, Robert D., Hogan, Kelly A., Graham, Alastair G. C., Nitsche, Frank O., Lehrmann, Asmara A., Lepp, Allison P., Kirkham, James D., Fitzgerald, Victoria T., Garcia-Barrera, Georgina, Ehrmann, Werner, and Wacker, Lukas
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GLACIERS , *ICE shelves , *SEA ice , *GLACIOLOGY , *GEOPHYSICAL surveys - Abstract
Today, relatively warm Circumpolar Deep Water is melting Thwaites Glacier at the base of its ice shelf and at the grounding zone, contributing to significant ice retreat. Accelerating ice loss has been observed since the 1970s; however, it is unclear when this phase of significant melting initiated. We analyzed the marine sedimentary record to reconstruct Thwaites Glacier's history from the early Holocene to present. Marine geophysical surveys were carried out along the floating ice-shelf margin to identify core locations from various geomorphic settings. We use sedimentological data and physical properties to define sedimentary facies at seven core sites. Glaciomarine sediment deposits reveal that the grounded ice in the Amundsen Sea Embayment had already retreated to within ~45 km of the modern grounding zone prior to ca. 9,400 y ago. Sediments deposited within the past 100+ y record abrupt changes in environmental conditions. On seafloor highs, these shifts document ice-shelf thinning initiating at least as early as the 1940s. Sediments recovered from deep basins reflect a transition from ice proximal to slightly more distal conditions, suggesting ongoing grounding-zone retreat since the 1950s. The timing of ice-shelf unpinning from the seafloor for Thwaites Glacier coincides with similar records from neighboring Pine Island Glacier. Our work provides robust new evidence that glacier retreat in the Amundsen Sea was initiated in the mid-twentieth century, likely associated with climate variability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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265. The infill of tunnel valleys in the central North Sea: Implications for sedimentary processes, geohazards, and ice-sheet dynamics.
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Kirkham, James D., Hogan, Kelly A., Larter, Robert D., Self, Ed, Games, Ken, Huuse, Mads, Stewart, Margaret A., Ottesen, Dag, Le Heron, Daniel P., Lawrence, Alex, Kane, Ian, Arnold, Neil S., and Dowdeswell, Julian A.
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SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *ICE sheet thawing , *GLACIAL landforms , *CARBON sequestration , *ICE sheets , *VALLEYS , *SEDIMENT transport , *ICE shelves , *SEISMIC prospecting - Abstract
Tunnel valleys are widespread in formerly glaciated regions such as the North Sea and record sediment transport beneath ice sheets undergoing deglaciation. However, their complex infill architecture often makes their implications for ice-sheet processes difficult to unravel. Here, we use high resolution 3D (HR3D) seismic-reflection data, improved-resolution conventional 3D seismic-reflection data, and geotechnical information from industry-acquired boreholes to image the infill architecture of buried Quaternary tunnel valleys in the North Sea in unprecedented detail. Ten cross-cutting generations of tunnel valleys are mapped beneath the seafloor of the North Sea where only seven were visible previously. Each generation of tunnel valleys potentially reflects a different glaciation, although our evidence may imply that it is possible to rapidly erode and infill multiple generations of tunnel valleys within a single glacial cycle. The infill of the oldest tunnel valley generations reflects sedimentation during relatively gradual ice-sheet retreat, with occasional episodes of overriding by re-advancing grounded ice. Tunnel valleys formed in more recent glaciations are characterised by more variable sedimentation patterns that reflect dynamic fluctuations of the ice margin, including readvances and stagnation, during valley filling and ice retreat. Numerous subglacial landforms are also imaged within the tunnel valleys; these sometimes contain shallow gas accumulations that represent geohazards for seafloor infrastructure installations. In addition, we document examples where salt diapirism has caused fluids to migrate upwards from depth through faults and into the near-surface tunnel valleys. In instances where this occurs, the relatively porous and often highly continuous subglacial landforms present within their infill may allow these fluids to spread laterally for kilometres or even escape from the seafloor; it is therefore important to consider tunnel valleys when monitoring possible CO 2 leakage from carbon capture and storage efforts. • The infill architecture of tunnel valleys in the North Sea is examined in detail. • Ten generations of tunnel valleys are mapped beneath the central North Sea where only seven were visible previously. • Multiple generations of tunnel valleys can be eroded and infilled within a single glacial cycle. • Tunnel valley sedimentation patterns became more variable in recent glaciations compared to older ones. • Tunnel valleys contain hazardous gas-filled landforms that could reduce the efficacy of carbon capture and storage efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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266. Tunnel valley formation beneath deglaciating mid-latitude ice sheets: Observations and modelling.
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Kirkham, James D., Hogan, Kelly A., Larter, Robert D., Arnold, Neil S., Ely, Jeremy C., Clark, Chris D., Self, Ed, Games, Ken, Huuse, Mads, Stewart, Margaret A., Ottesen, Dag, and Dowdeswell, Julian A.
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SUBGLACIAL lakes , *MELTWATER , *ICE sheets , *GLOBAL warming , *VALLEYS , *EROSION , *LANDFORMS , *HYDROLOGY - Abstract
The geological record of landforms and sediments produced beneath deglaciating ice sheets offers insights into inaccessible glacial processes. Large subglacial valleys formed by meltwater erosion of sediments (tunnel valleys) are widespread in formerly glaciated regions such as the North Sea. Obtaining a better understanding of these features may help with the parameterisation of basal melt rates and the interplay between basal hydrology and ice dynamics in numerical models of past, present, and future ice-sheet configurations. However, the mechanisms and timescales over which tunnel valleys form remain poorly constrained. Here, we present a series of numerical modelling experiments, informed by new observations from high-resolution 3D seismic data (6.25 m bin size, ∼4 m vertical resolution), which test different hypotheses of tunnel valley formation and calculate subglacial water routing, seasonal water discharges, and the rates at which tunnel valleys are eroded beneath deglaciating ice sheets. Networks of smaller or abandoned channels, pervasive slump deposits, and subglacial landforms are imaged inside and at the base of larger tunnel valleys, indicating that these tunnel valleys were carved through the action of migrating smaller channels within tens of kilometres of the ice margin and were later widened by ice-contact erosion. Our model results imply that the drainage of extensive surface meltwater to the ice-sheet bed is the dominant mechanism responsible for tunnel valley formation; this process can drive rapid incision of networks of regularly spaced subglacial tunnel valleys beneath the fringes of retreating ice sheets within hundreds to thousands of years during deglaciation. Combined, our observations and modelling results identify how tunnel valleys form beneath deglaciating mid-latitude ice sheets and have implications for how the subglacial hydrological systems of contemporary ice sheets may respond to sustained climate warming. [Display omitted] • Numerical experiments and geophysical data are used to investigate tunnel valley formation beneath deglaciating ice sheets. • New high-resolution 3D seismic data reveal abandoned channel systems, slumps, and subglacial landforms inside tunnel valleys. • Migrating channels fed by seasonal surface meltwater erode tunnel valleys within 100s to 1000s of years during deglaciation. • Modelled tunnel valleys form time-transgressively close to the retreating ice sheet margin. • Our results explain the formation of tunnel valleys in most previously glaciated regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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267. Towards modelling of corrugation ridges at ice-sheet grounding lines.
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Hogan, Kelly A., Warburton, Katarzyna L. P., Graham, Alastair G. C., Neufeld, Jerome A., Hewitt, Duncan R., Dowdeswell, Julian A., and Larter, Robert D.
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ICE sheets , *OCEAN bottom , *FLEXURE , *GLACIERS , *LANDFORMS , *ICE shelves , *MID-ocean ridges , *GRAIN - Abstract
Improvements in the resolution of sea-floor mapping techniques have revealed extremely regular, sub-metre-scale ridge landforms produced by the tidal flexure of ice-shelf grounding lines as they retreated very rapidly (i.e. at rates of several kilometres per year). Guided by such novel sea-floor observations from Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica, we present three mathematical models for the formation of these corrugation ridges at a tidally migrating grounding line (that is retreating at a constant rate), where each ridge is formed by either constant till flux to the grounding line, till extrusion from the grounding line, or the resuspension and transport of grains from the grounding-zone bed. We find that both till extrusion (squeezing out till like toothpaste as the ice sheet re-settles on the sea floor) and resuspension and transport of material can qualitatively reproduce regular, delicate ridges at a retreating grounding line, as described by sea-floor observations. By considering the known properties of subglacial sediments, we agree with existing schematic models that the most likely mechanism for ridge formation is till extrusion at each low-tide position, essentially preserving an imprint of the ice-sheet grounding line as it retreated. However, when realistic (shallow) bed slopes are used in the simulations, ridges start to overprint one another, suggesting that, to preserve the regular ridges that have been observed, grounding line retreat rates (driven by dynamic thinning?) may be even higher than previously thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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268. Corrigendum to "Late Eocene signals of oncoming Icehouse conditions and changing ocean circulation, Antarctica" [Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 600 (2022) 117885].
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Huang, Xiaoxia, Steel, Ronald, and Larter, Robert D.
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OCEAN circulation , *EARTH (Planet) , *EOCENE Epoch , *MILANKOVITCH cycles - Published
- 2023
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269. Late Eocene signals of oncoming Icehouse conditions and changing ocean circulation, Antarctica.
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Huang, Xiaoxia, Steel, Ronald, and Larter, Robert D.
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OCEAN circulation , *EOCENE Epoch , *PALEOGENE , *EOCENE-Oligocene boundary , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *CONTINENTAL slopes , *GLACIAL drift - Abstract
The end of the Eocene greenhouse world was the most dramatic phase in the long-term Cenozoic cooling trend. Here we use 75,000 km of multi/single channel seismic reflection data from offshore Prydz Bay, Antarctica, to provide new insight on the Paleogene stratigraphic transition from greenhouse to icehouse conditions and reorganizing the ocean circulation changes that were invigorated by the cooling and glaciation. We identify a new prominent Paleogene transitional phase (Greenhouse to Icehouse) preserved in the deep-water sedimentary record by correlating from shelf to the continental slope. The occurrence of mega-Mass Transport Deposits (MTDs) on the slope during an early stage in the transition suggests significant instability and collapse of the upper part of the continental margin. A second stage of the transition is represented by the growth of a well-defined set of continental slope clinoforms. We estimate the formation age of the MTDs and clinoforms to be around Eocene-Oligocene Transition. The formation of the clinoforms in the transitional phase indicates sea level has risen, and large volumes sediment delivered to the margin by marine-terminating glaciers on the shelf. Finally, a subsequent marked migration of the margin depocenter toward the west and northwest, attests the onset of drift sedimentation and full glacial conditions, suggesting a more vigorous ocean circulation as the Earth entered the icehouse conditions after the Eocene-Oligocene boundary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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270. Recognizing key sedimentary facies and their distribution in mixed turbidite–contourite depositional systems: The case of the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula.
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Rodrigues, Sara, Hernández‐Molina, Francisco Javier, Hillenbrand, Claus‐Dieter, Lucchi, Renata G., Rodríguez‐Tovar, Francisco J., Rebesco, Michele, Larter, Robert D., and Valdez, Victoria
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FACIES , *SEDIMENTARY structures , *TURBIDITY currents , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *PENINSULAS , *SEDIMENTARY facies (Geology) - Abstract
Interplay of deep‐water sedimentary processes is responsible for building a myriad of features and deposits across mixed turbidite–contourite systems, from <5 cm beds to >200 km long sedimentary drifts. Investigations of the spatial and temporal variability of their sedimentary facies and facies associations is crucial to reveal the dynamics between along‐slope bottom currents and down‐slope turbidity currents, as well as their impact on drift construction and channel erosion. This study focuses on extensive modern mixed (turbidite–contourite) systems, developed across the continental rise of the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula. Nine sediment cores were sampled and analysed, through grain size and geochemical methods, to study the sedimentary facies at high‐resolution (ca 1 to 20 cm). Three main facies associations have been identified across distinct morphological features (i.e. mounded drifts and trunk channels), comprising intercalations of hemipelagites, bottom current reworked sands (which include fine to coarse‐grained contourites) and gravitational facies (turbidites and mass‐transport deposits). These facies associations reflect fluctuations of the background sedimentation, oscillations of the bottom‐current velocity and of the frequency of gravity‐driven currents. The sedimentary record features cyclic alternations during the Late Quaternary (>99 kyr), suggesting that variations between along‐slope bottom currents and down‐slope turbidity currents are strongly linked to glacial–interglacial cycles during Marine Isotope Stages 1 to 6. Sedimentary records affected by bottom currents on polar margins, such as those of the Antarctic Peninsula, are essential to decipher the facies and facies sequences of bottom‐current deposits, as the low degree of bioturbation throughout most of the sediments allows us to observe the original sedimentary structures, which are poorly preserved in similar deposits from other continental margins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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271. Early and middle Miocene ice sheet dynamics in the Ross Sea: Results from integrated core-log-seismic interpretation.
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Pérez, Lara F., De Santis, Laura, McKay, Robert M., Larter, Robert D., Ash, Jeanine, Bart, Phil J., Böhm, Gualtiero, Brancatelli, Giuseppe, Browne, Imogen, Colleoni, Florence, Dodd, Justin P., Geletti, Riccardo, Harwood, David M., Kuhn, Gerhard, Laberg, Jan Sverre, Leckie, R. Mark, Levy, Richard H., Marschalek, James, Mateo, Zenon, and Naish, Timothy R.
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ICE sheets , *UNDERWATER drilling , *MIOCENE Epoch , *ICE caps , *DRILL cores , *MELTWATER , *ICE shelves - Abstract
Oscillations in ice sheet extent during early and middle Miocene are intermittently preserved in the sedimentary record from the Antarctic continental shelf, with widespread erosion occurring during major ice sheet advances, and open marine deposition during times of ice sheet retreat. Data from seismic reflection surveys and drill sites from Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 28 and International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 374, located across the present-day middle continental shelf of the central Ross Sea (Antarctica), indicate the presence of expanded early to middle Miocene sedimentary sections. These include the Miocene climate optimum (MCO ca. 17-14.6 Ma) and the middle Miocene climate transition (MMCT ca. 14.6-13.9 Ma). Here, we correlate drill core records, wireline logs and reflection seismic data to elucidate the depositional architecture of the continental shelf and reconstruct the evolution and variability of dynamic ice sheets in the Ross Sea during the Miocene. Drill-site data are used to constrain seismic isopach maps that document the evolution of different ice sheets and ice caps which influenced sedimentary processes in the Ross Sea through the early to middle Miocene. In the early Miocene, periods of localized advance of the ice margin are revealed by the formation of thick sediment wedges prograding into the basins. At this time, morainal bank complexes are distinguished along the basin margins suggesting sediment supply derived from marine-terminating glaciers. During the MCO, biosiliceous-bearing sediments are regionally mapped within the depocenters of the major sedimentary basin across the Ross Sea, indicative of widespread open marine deposition with reduced glacimarine influence. At the MMCT, a distinct erosive surface is interpreted as representing large-scale marine-based ice sheet advance over most of the Ross Sea paleo-continental shelf. The regional mapping of the seismic stratigraphic architecture and its correlation to drilling data indicate a regional transition through the Miocene from growth of ice caps and inland ice sheets with marine-terminating margins, to widespread marine-based ice sheets extending across the outer continental shelf in the Ross Sea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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272. Morphometry of bedrock meltwater channels on Antarctic inner continental shelves: Implications for channel development and subglacial hydrology.
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Kirkham, James D., Hogan, Kelly A., Larter, Robert D., Arnold, Neil S., Nitsche, Frank O., Kuhn, Gerhard, Gohl, Karsten, Anderson, John B., and Dowdeswell, Julian A.
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SUBGLACIAL lakes , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *HYDROLOGY , *MELTWATER , *BEDROCK , *MORPHOMETRICS , *DRUMLINS , *GLACIOLOGY - Abstract
Expanding multibeam bathymetric data coverage over the last two decades has revealed extensive networks of submarine channels incised into bedrock on the Antarctic inner continental shelf. The large dimensions and prevalence of the channels implies the presence of an active subglacial hydrological system beneath the past Antarctic Ice Sheet which we can use to learn more about inaccessible subglacial processes. Here, we map and analyse over 2700 bedrock channels situated across >100,000 km2 of continental shelf in the western Antarctic Peninsula and Amundsen Sea to produce the first inventory of submarine channels on the Antarctic inner continental shelf. Morphometric analysis reveals highly similar distributions of channel widths, depths, cross-sectional areas and geometric properties, with subtle differences between channels in the western Antarctic Peninsula compared to those in the Amundsen Sea. At 75–3400 m wide, 3–280 m deep, 160–290,000 m2 in cross-sectional area, and typically 8 times as wide as they are deep, the channels have similar morphologies to tunnel valleys and meltwater channel systems observed from other formerly glaciated landscapes despite differences in substrate geology and glaciological regime. We propose that the Antarctic bedrock channels formed over multiple glacial cycles through the episodic drainage of at least 59 former subglacial lakes identified on the inner continental shelf. • Inventory of subglacial meltwater channels on the West Antarctic continental shelf. • >2700 bedrock meltwater channels are mapped, and their morphometry is analysed. • Channels are similar to tunnel valley and meltwater channel systems elsewhere. • Repeated subglacial lake drainage formed the channels over multiple glaciations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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273. Tunnel valley formation beneath deglaciating mid-latitude ice sheets: Observations and modelling
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James D. Kirkham, Kelly A. Hogan, Robert D. Larter, Neil S. Arnold, Jeremy C. Ely, Chris D. Clark, Ed Self, Ken Games, Mads Huuse, Margaret A. Stewart, Dag Ottesen, Julian A. Dowdeswell, Kirkham, James D [0000-0002-0506-1625], Larter, Robert D [0000-0002-8414-7389], Arnold, Neil S [0000-0001-7538-3999], Ely, Jeremy C [0000-0003-4007-1500], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Archeology ,Global and Planetary Change ,13 Climate Action ,Geology ,37 Earth Sciences ,3705 Geology ,3709 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The geological record of landforms and sediments produced beneath deglaciating ice sheets offers insights into inaccessible glacial processes. Large subglacial valleys formed by meltwater erosion of sediments (tunnel valleys) are widespread in formerly glaciated regions such as the North Sea. Obtaining a better understanding of these features may help with the parameterisation of basal melt rates and the interplay between basal hydrology and ice dynamics in numerical models of past, present, and future ice-sheet configurations. However, the mechanisms and timescales over which tunnel valleys form remain poorly constrained. Here, we present a series of numerical modelling experiments, informed by new observations from high-resolution 3D seismic data (6.25 m bin size, ∼4 m vertical resolution), which test different hypotheses of tunnel valley formation and calculate subglacial water routing, seasonal water discharges, and the rates at which tunnel valleys are eroded beneath deglaciating ice sheets. Networks of smaller or abandoned channels, pervasive slump deposits, and subglacial landforms are imaged inside and at the base of larger tunnel valleys, indicating that these tunnel valleys were carved through the action of migrating smaller channels within tens of kilometres of the ice margin and were later widened by ice-contact erosion. Our model results imply that the drainage of extensive surface meltwater to the ice-sheet bed is the dominant mechanism responsible for tunnel valley formation; this process can drive rapid incision of networks of regularly spaced subglacial tunnel valleys beneath the fringes of retreating ice sheets within hundreds to thousands of years during deglaciation. Combined, our observations and modelling results identify how tunnel valleys form beneath deglaciating mid-latitude ice sheets and have implications for how the subglacial hydrological systems of contemporary ice sheets may respond to sustained climate warming.
- Published
- 2022
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274. History of Anvers-Hugo Trough, western Antarctic Peninsula shelf, since the Last Glacial Maximum. Part II: Palaeo-productivity and palaeoceanographic changes during the Last Glacial Transition.
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Roseby, Zoë A., Smith, James A., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Allen, Claire S., Leventer, Amy, Hogan, Kelly, Cartigny, Matthieu J.B., Rosenheim, Brad E., Kuhn, Gerhard, and Larter, Robert D.
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ICE sheet thawing , *BIOLOGICAL productivity , *MARINE productivity , *ABSOLUTE sea level change , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *GLACIAL melting , *GLACIERS - Abstract
Following the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; ca. 23-19 calibrated [cal.] kyr before present [BP]), atmospheric and oceanic warming, together with global sea-level rise, drove widespread deglaciation of the Antarctic Ice Sheet, increasing the flux of freshwater to the ocean and leading to substantial changes in marine biological productivity. On the Antarctic continental shelf, periods of elevated biological productivity, often preserved in the sediment record as laminated (and sometimes varved) diatomaceous oozes (LDO), have been reported from several locations and are typically associated with the formation of calving bay re-entrants during ice sheet retreat. Understanding what drives the formation and deposition of LDOs, and the impact of deglacial processes on biogenic productivity more generally, can help inform how Antarctic coastal environments will respond to current and future ice sheet melting. In this study we utilise a suite of sediment cores recovered from Anvers-Hugo Trough (AHT), western Antarctic Peninsula shelf, which documents the transition from subglacial to glacimarine conditions following retreat of an expanded ice stream after the LGM. We present quantitative absolute diatom abundance (ADA) and species assemblage data, to investigate changes in biological productivity during the Last Glacial Transition (19-11 cal kyr BP). In combination with radiocarbon dating, we show that seasonally open marine conditions were established on the mid-shelf by 13.6 cal kyr BP, but LDOs did not start to accumulate until ∼11.5 cal kyr BP. The ∼1.4 kyr delay between the onset of seasonally open marine conditions and LDO deposition indicates that physiographic changes, and specifically the establishment of a calving bay in AHT, is insufficient to explain LDO deposition alone. LDO deposition in AHT coincides with the early Holocene climatic optimum (∼11.5 – 9.0 kyr) and is therefore explained in terms of increased atmospheric/ocean temperatures, high rates of sea and glacial ice melt and the formation of a well-stratified water column in the austral spring. An implication of our study is that extensive bathymetric mapping in conjunction with detailed core analyses is required to reliably infer environmental controls on LDO deposition. • Changes in biological productivity during the Last Glacial Transition are revealed. • Intense diatom blooms are associated with high annual insolation and enhanced meltwater input. • Laminated diatomaceous ooze deposition coincides with the early Holocene climatic optimum. • Seafloor bathymetry plays an important role in controlling the thickness of laminated diatomaceous ooze deposits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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275. Early to middle Miocene ice sheet dynamics in the westernmost Ross Sea (Antarctica): Regional correlations.
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Pérez, Lara F., McKay, Robert M., De Santis, Laura, Larter, Robert D., Levy, Richard H., Naish, Timothy R., Anderson, John B., Bart, Philip J., Busetti, Martina, Dunbar, Gavin, Sauli, Chiara, Sorlien, Christopher C., and Speece, Marvin
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ICE sheets , *MIOCENE Epoch , *SEISMIC reflection method , *ICE shelves , *DRILL cores , *LEVEES - Abstract
The present-day morpho-stratigraphy of the Ross Sea is the result of Cenozoic tectonic and cryospheric events, and constitutes a key record of Antarctica's cryospheric evolution. An enduring problem in interpreting this record in a broader regional context is that the correlation between eastern and western Ross Sea stratigraphy has remained uncertain due to the limited number of drill sites. We correlate the glacial-related features observed on a dense network of seismic reflection profiles in McMurdo Sound with those identified in the Nordenskjöld and Drygalski Basins, as well as the basins farther east in the central Ross Sea. We present an improved correlation of the regional patterns of early to middle Miocene ice-sheet variance across the Ross Sea constrained by new evaluation of seismic facies and age models from one site recovered by the Antarctic Drilling Project (ANDRILL) in the southwestern most part of McMurdo Sound. We also integrate this correlation with the recently published seismic framework in the central Ross Sea. The formation of U-shaped valleys during the early Miocene in McMurdo Sound, together with prograding sedimentary wedges in the western-most basins, and the central Ross Sea, suggest two major phases of overall advance of a marine-terminating ice sheet between ~18 Ma and ~17.4 Ma. Widespread formation of turbiditic channel-levee systems in McMurdo Sound and rapid sediment deposition in Nordernskjöld Basin point to subsequent ice-sheet retreat between ~17.4 Ma and ~15.8 Ma, coinciding with the onset of the Miocene Climate Optimum (MCO; ~17–14.5 Ma). However, the carving of troughs and formation of irregular morphologic features suggest that an extensive ice sheet still remained along the western Ross margin at ~17.4 Ma and a brief episode of ice-sheet advance occurred at ~16.8 Ma in the earliest interval of the MCO. Subsequent marine-based ice sheet advance during the Middle Miocene Climate Transition (MMCT, ~14.0–13.8 Ma) is indicated by widespread erosional features. Our results reconcile the semi-continouous seismic and drill core stratigraphy of the offshore Ross Sea continental shelf with inferences of ice sheet dynamics from continuous far-field deep sea and sea level records, as well as the highly discontinous (and heavily debated) onshore records of pre-MMCT glaciation and aridification of the Transantarctic Mountains at 14 Ma. • Core-log-seismic correlation allows regional correlation of the Ross Sea record • 2 major advances of marine-terminating ice sheet occurred between 18 and 17.4 Ma • Ice sheet retreated at the onset of the Miocene Climate Optimum • Short-term ice-sheet advance occurred at ~16.8 Ma • Widespread marine-based ice sheet correlates to the Miocene Climate Transition [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
276. History of Anvers-Hugo Trough, western Antarctic Peninsula shelf, since the Last Glacial Maximum. Part I: Deglacial history based on new sedimentological and chronological data.
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Roseby, Zoë A., Smith, James A., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Cartigny, Matthieu J.B., Rosenheim, Brad E., Hogan, Kelly A., Allen, Claire S., Leventer, Amy, Kuhn, Gerhard, Ehrmann, Werner, and Larter, Robert D.
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LAST Glacial Maximum , *ICE sheets , *ANTARCTIC ice , *ICE shelves , *RADIOCARBON dating , *CONTINENTAL shelf , *PENINSULAS - Abstract
Reconstructing the advance and retreat of past ice sheets provides important long-term context for recent change(s) and enables us to better understand ice sheet responses to forcing mechanisms and external boundary conditions that regulate grounding line retreat. This study applies various radiocarbon dating techniques, guided by a detailed sedimentological analyses, to reconstruct the glacial history of Anvers-Hugo Trough (AHT), one of the largest bathymetric troughs on the western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) shelf. Existing records from AHT indicate that the expanded Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet (APIS) advanced to, or close to, the continental shelf edge during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 23-19 cal kyr BP [ = calibrated kiloyears before present]), with deglaciation of the outer shelf after ∼16.3 cal kyr BP. Our new chronological data show that the APIS had retreated to the middle shelf by ∼15.7 cal kyr BP. Over this 600-year interval, two large grounding-zone wedges (GZW) were deposited across the middle (GZW2) and inner shelf (GZW3), suggesting that their formation occurred on centennial rather than millennial timescales. Expanded sequences of sub-ice shelf sediments occur seaward of the inner GZW3, which suggests that the grounding line remained stationary for a prolonged period over the middle shelf. Grounding-line retreat rates indicate faster retreat across the outer to middle shelf compared to retreat across the middle to inner shelf. We suggest that variable retreat rates relate to the broad-scale morphology of the trough, which is characterised by a relatively smooth, retrograde seabed on the outer to middle shelf and rugged morphology with a locally landward shallowing bed and deep basin on the inner shelf. A slowdown in retreat rate could also have been promoted by convergent ice flow over the inner shelf and the availability of pinning points associated with bathymetric highs around Anvers Island and Hugo Island. • The deglacial history of Anvers-Hugo Trough is revealed by marine geological and geophysical data. • Application of multiple 14C dating methods allows reliable dating of ice sheet retreat. • Grounded ice had retreated to the mid-shelf by ∼15.7 cal kyr BP. • Retreat rates are controlled by the broad-scale morphology of the shelf. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
277. New constraints on the timing of West Antarctic Ice Sheet retreat in the eastern Amundsen Sea since the Last Glacial Maximum.
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Smith, James A., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Kuhn, Gerhard, Klages, Johann Phillip, Graham, Alastair G.C., Larter, Robert D., Ehrmann, Werner, Moreton, Steven G., Wiers, Steffen, and Frederichs, Thomas
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LAST Glacial Maximum , *GLACIERS , *GLACIAL melting , *CARBONATES - Abstract
Glaciers flowing into the Amundsen Sea Embayment (ASE) account for > 35% of the total discharge of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) and have thinned and retreated dramatically over the past two decades. Here we present detailed marine geological data and an extensive new radiocarbon dataset from the eastern ASE in order to constrain the retreat of the WAIS since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and assess the significance of these recent changes. Our dating approach, relying mainly on the acid insoluble organic (AIO) fraction, utilises multi-proxy analyses of the sediments to characterise their lithofacies and determine the horizon in each core that would yield the most reliable age for deglaciation. In total, we dated 69 samples and show that deglaciation of the outer shelf was underway before 20,600 calibrated years before present (cal yr BP), reaching the mid-shelf by 13,575 cal yr BP and the inner shelf to within ca. 150 km of the present grounding line by 10,615 cal yr BP. The timing of retreat is broadly consistent with previously published radiocarbon dates on biogenic carbonate from the eastern ASE as well as AIO 14 C ages from the western ASE and provides new constraints for ice sheet models. The overall retreat trajectory – slow on the outer shelf, more rapid from the middle to inner shelf – clearly highlights the importance of reverse bedslopes in controlling phases of accelerated groundling line retreat. Despite revealing these broad scale trends, the current dataset does not capture detailed changes in ice flow, such as stillstands during grounding line retreat (i.e., deposition of grounding zone wedges) and possible readvances as depicted in the geomorphological record. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
278. Reconstruction of changes in the Weddell Sea sector of the Antarctic Ice Sheet since the Last Glacial Maximum.
- Author
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Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Bentley, Michael J., Stolldorf, Travis D., Hein, Andrew S., Kuhn, Gerhard, Graham, Alastair G.C., Fogwill, Christopher J., Kristoffersen, Yngve, Smith, James. A., Anderson, John B., Larter, Robert D., Melles, Martin, Hodgson, Dominic A., Mulvaney, Robert, and Sugden, David E.
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ICE sheets , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *GLACIAL melting , *SEA level - Abstract
The Weddell Sea sector is one of the main formation sites for Antarctic Bottom Water and an outlet for about one fifth of Antarctica's continental ice volume. Over the last few decades, studies on glacial–geological records in this sector have provided conflicting reconstructions of changes in ice-sheet extent and ice-sheet thickness since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM at ca 23–19 calibrated kiloyears before present, cal ka BP). Terrestrial geomorphological records and exposure ages obtained from rocks in the hinterland of the Weddell Sea, ice-sheet thickness constraints from ice cores and some radiocarbon dates on offshore sediments were interpreted to indicate no significant ice thickening and locally restricted grounding-line advance at the LGM. Other marine geological and geophysical studies concluded that subglacial bedforms mapped on the Weddell Sea continental shelf, subglacial deposits and sediments over-compacted by overriding ice recovered in cores, and the few available radiocarbon ages from marine sediments are consistent with major ice-sheet advance at the LGM. Reflecting the geological interpretations, different ice-sheet models have reconstructed conflicting LGM ice-sheet configurations for the Weddell Sea sector. Consequently, the estimated contributions of ice-sheet build-up in the Weddell Sea sector to the LGM sea-level low-stand of ∼130 m vary considerably. In this paper, we summarise and review the geological records of past ice-sheet margins and past ice-sheet elevations in the Weddell Sea sector. We compile marine and terrestrial chronological data constraining former ice-sheet size, thereby highlighting different levels of certainty, and present two alternative scenarios of the LGM ice-sheet configuration, including time-slice reconstructions for post-LGM grounding-line retreat. Moreover, we discuss consistencies and possible reasons for inconsistencies between the various reconstructions and propose objectives for future research. The aim of our study is to provide two alternative interpretations of glacial–geological datasets on Antarctic Ice-Sheet History for the Weddell Sea sector, which can be utilised to test and improve numerical ice-sheet models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
279. A community-based geological reconstruction of Antarctic Ice Sheet deglaciation since the Last Glacial Maximum.
- Author
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Bentley, Michael J., Ó Cofaigh, Colm, Anderson, John B., Conway, Howard, Davies, Bethan, Graham, Alastair G.C., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Hodgson, Dominic A., Jamieson, Stewart S.R., Larter, Robert D., Mackintosh, Andrew, Smith, James A., Verleyen, Elie, Ackert, Robert P., Bart, Philip J., Berg, Sonja, Brunstein, Daniel, Canals, Miquel, Colhoun, Eric A., and Crosta, Xavier
- Subjects
- *
LAST Glacial Maximum , *GEOLOGICAL research , *GLACIAL melting , *QUATERNARY paleoclimatology , *MELTWATER - Abstract
A robust understanding of Antarctic Ice Sheet deglacial history since the Last Glacial Maximum is important in order to constrain ice sheet and glacial-isostatic adjustment models, and to explore the forcing mechanisms responsible for ice sheet retreat. Such understanding can be derived from a broad range of geological and glaciological datasets and recent decades have seen an upsurge in such data gathering around the continent and Sub-Antarctic islands. Here, we report a new synthesis of those datasets, based on an accompanying series of reviews of the geological data, organised by sector. We present a series of timeslice maps for 20 ka, 15 ka, 10 ka and 5 ka, including grounding line position and ice sheet thickness changes, along with a clear assessment of levels of confidence. The reconstruction shows that the Antarctic Ice sheet did not everywhere reach the continental shelf edge at its maximum, that initial retreat was asynchronous, and that the spatial pattern of deglaciation was highly variable, particularly on the inner shelf. The deglacial reconstruction is consistent with a moderate overall excess ice volume and with a relatively small Antarctic contribution to meltwater pulse 1a. We discuss key areas of uncertainty both around the continent and by time interval, and we highlight potential priorities for future work. The synthesis is intended to be a resource for the modelling and glacial geological community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
280. Reconstruction of ice-sheet changes in the Antarctic Peninsula since the Last Glacial Maximum.
- Author
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Ó Cofaigh, Colm, Davies, Bethan J., Livingstone, Stephen J., Smith, James A., Johnson, Joanne S., Hocking, Emma P., Hodgson, Dominic A., Anderson, John B., Bentley, Michael J., Canals, Miquel, Domack, Eugene, Dowdeswell, Julian A., Evans, Jeffrey, Glasser, Neil F., Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter, Larter, Robert D., Roberts, Stephen J., and Simms, Alexander R.
- Subjects
- *
ICE sheets , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *SUBGLACIAL lakes , *COSMOGENIC nuclides - Abstract
This paper compiles and reviews marine and terrestrial data constraining the dimensions and configuration of the Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet (APIS) from the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) through deglaciation to the present day. These data are used to reconstruct grounding-line retreat in 5 ka time-steps from 25 ka BP to present. Glacial landforms and subglacial tills on the eastern and western Antarctic Peninsula (AP) shelf indicate that the APIS was grounded to the outer shelf/shelf edge at the LGM and contained a series of fast-flowing ice streams that drained along cross-shelf bathymetric troughs. The ice sheet was grounded at the shelf edge until ∼20 cal ka BP. Chronological control on retreat is provided by radiocarbon dates on glacimarine sediments from the shelf troughs and on lacustrine and terrestrial organic remains, as well as cosmogenic nuclide dates on erratics and ice moulded bedrock. Retreat in the east was underway by about 18 cal ka BP. The earliest dates on recession in the west are from Bransfield Basin where recession was underway by 17.5 cal ka BP. Ice streams were active during deglaciation at least until the ice sheet had pulled back to the mid-shelf. The timing of initial retreat decreased progressively southwards along the western AP shelf; the large ice stream in Marguerite Trough may have remained grounded at the shelf edge until about 14 cal ka BP, although terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide ages indicate that thinning had commenced by 18 ka BP. Between 15 and 10 cal ka BP the APIS underwent significant recession along the western AP margin, although retreat between individual troughs was asynchronous. Ice in Marguerite Trough may have still been grounded on the mid-shelf at 10 cal ka BP. In the Larsen-A region the transition from grounded to floating ice was established by 10.7–10.6 cal ka BP. The APIS had retreated towards its present configuration in the western AP by the mid-Holocene but on the eastern peninsula may have approached its present configuration several thousand years earlier, by the start of the Holocene. Mid to late-Holocene retreat was diachronous with stillstands, re-advances and changes in ice-shelf configuration being recorded in most places. Subglacial topography exerted a major control on grounding-line retreat with grounding-zone wedges, and thus by inference slow-downs or stillstands in the retreat of the grounding line, occurring in some cases on reverse bed slopes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
281. The International Bathymetric Chart of the Southern Ocean Version 2.
- Author
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Dorschel B, Hehemann L, Viquerat S, Warnke F, Dreutter S, Tenberge YS, Accettella D, An L, Barrios F, Bazhenova E, Black J, Bohoyo F, Davey C, De Santis L, Dotti CE, Fremand AC, Fretwell PT, Gales JA, Gao J, Gasperini L, Greenbaum JS, Jencks JH, Hogan K, Hong JK, Jakobsson M, Jensen L, Kool J, Larin S, Larter RD, Leitchenkov G, Loubrieu B, Mackay K, Mayer L, Millan R, Morlighem M, Navidad F, Nitsche FO, Nogi Y, Pertuisot C, Post AL, Pritchard HD, Purser A, Rebesco M, Rignot E, Roberts JL, Rovere M, Ryzhov I, Sauli C, Schmitt T, Silvano A, Smith J, Snaith H, Tate AJ, Tinto K, Vandenbossche P, Weatherall P, Wintersteller P, Yang C, Zhang T, and Arndt JE
- Abstract
The Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica is a region that is key to a range of climatic and oceanographic processes with worldwide effects, and is characterised by high biological productivity and biodiversity. Since 2013, the International Bathymetric Chart of the Southern Ocean (IBCSO) has represented the most comprehensive compilation of bathymetry for the Southern Ocean south of 60°S. Recently, the IBCSO Project has combined its efforts with the Nippon Foundation - GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project supporting the goal of mapping the world's oceans by 2030. New datasets initiated a second version of IBCSO (IBCSO v2). This version extends to 50°S (covering approximately 2.4 times the area of seafloor of the previous version) including the gateways of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current and the Antarctic circumpolar frontal systems. Due to increased (multibeam) data coverage, IBCSO v2 significantly improves the overall representation of the Southern Ocean seafloor and resolves many submarine landforms in more detail. This makes IBCSO v2 the most authoritative seafloor map of the area south of 50°S., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
282. Temperate rainforests near the South Pole during peak Cretaceous warmth.
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Klages JP, Salzmann U, Bickert T, Hillenbrand CD, Gohl K, Kuhn G, Bohaty SM, Titschack J, Müller J, Frederichs T, Bauersachs T, Ehrmann W, van de Flierdt T, Pereira PS, Larter RD, Lohmann G, Niezgodzki I, Uenzelmann-Neben G, Zundel M, Spiegel C, Mark C, Chew D, Francis JE, Nehrke G, Schwarz F, Smith JA, Freudenthal T, Esper O, Pälike H, Ronge TA, and Dziadek R
- Subjects
- Antarctic Regions, Fossils, Geologic Sediments chemistry, History, Ancient, Models, Theoretical, New Zealand, Pollen, Spores isolation & purification, Atmosphere chemistry, Carbon Dioxide analysis, Carbon Dioxide history, Climate, Rainforest, Temperature
- Abstract
The mid-Cretaceous period was one of the warmest intervals of the past 140 million years
1-5 , driven by atmospheric carbon dioxide levels of around 1,000 parts per million by volume6 . In the near absence of proximal geological records from south of the Antarctic Circle, it is disputed whether polar ice could exist under such environmental conditions. Here we use a sedimentary sequence recovered from the West Antarctic shelf-the southernmost Cretaceous record reported so far-and show that a temperate lowland rainforest environment existed at a palaeolatitude of about 82° S during the Turonian-Santonian age (92 to 83 million years ago). This record contains an intact 3-metre-long network of in situ fossil roots embedded in a mudstone matrix containing diverse pollen and spores. A climate model simulation shows that the reconstructed temperate climate at this high latitude requires a combination of both atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations of 1,120-1,680 parts per million by volume and a vegetated land surface without major Antarctic glaciation, highlighting the important cooling effect exerted by ice albedo under high levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide.- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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