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The Laurentide Ice Sheet in southern New England and New York during and at the end of the Last Glacial Maximum - A cosmogenic-nuclide chronology.

Authors :
Balter-Kennedy, Allie
Schaefer, Joerg M.
Balco, Greg
Kelly, Meredith A.
Kaplan, Michael R.
Schwartz, Roseanne
Oakley, Bryan
Young, Nicolás E.
Hanley, Jean
Varuolo-Clarke, Arianna M.
Source :
Climate of the Past Discussions; 2/1/2024, p1-42, 42p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We present 40 new <superscript>10</superscript>Be exposure ages of moraines and other glacial deposits left behind by the southeastern sector of the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) in southern New England and New York, summarize the regional moraine record, and interpret the dataset in the context of previously published deglaciation chronologies. The regional moraine record spans the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), with the outermost ridge of the terminal complex dating to ~26-25 ka, the innermost ridge of the terminal complex dating to ~22 ka, and a series of smaller recessional limits within ~50 km of the terminal complex dating to ~21-20.5 ka. The chronology generally agrees with independent age constraints from radiocarbon and glacial varves. A few inconsistencies among ages from cosmogenic-nuclide measurements and those from other dating methods are explained by geologic scatter where several bedrock samples and boulders from the outer terminal moraine exhibit nuclide inheritance, while exposure ages on large moraines are likely affected by postdepositional disturbance. The exposure-age chronology places the southeastern sector of the LIS at or near its maximum extent from ~26 to 21 ka, which is broadly consistent with the LGM sea-level lowstand, local and regional temperature indicators, and local summer insolation. The net change in LIS extent represented by this chronology occurred more slowly (<5 to 25 m yr-1) than retreat through the rest of New England, consistent with a slow general rise in insolation and modeled summer temperature. We conclude that the major pulse of LIS deglaciation and accelerated recession, recorded by dated glacial deposits north of the moraines discussed here, did not begin until after atmospheric CO2 increased at ~18 ka, marking the onset of Termination 1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18149324
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Climate of the Past Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175535669
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2024-241