Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet?

In the Ross Sea embayment during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 18-22ka), the grounding line of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) advanced northwards into the Ross Ice Shelf (RIS). This effectively dammed the drainage of the Transantarctic Mountain outlet glaciers and caused significant downstream...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joy, K, Storey, B, Fink, D, Shulmeister, J
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/2339
id ftansto:oai:apo-prod.ansto.gov.au:10238/2339
record_format openpolar
spelling ftansto:oai:apo-prod.ansto.gov.au:10238/2339 2023-05-15T13:36:16+02:00 Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet? Joy, K Storey, B Fink, D Shulmeister, J 2010-07-05 http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/2339 en eng Joy, K., Storey, B., Fink, D., & Shulmeister, J. (2010). Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet? Annual Antarctic Conference 2010 - "A Taste of the Ice", 5th – 7th July 2010. In Proceedings of the Annual Antarctic Conference 2010 (p. 57). Christchurch, New Zealand: University of Canterbury. 1176-5798 http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/2339 Antarctica Ice Glaciers Expansion Beryllium 10 Age estimation Conference Poster 2010 ftansto 2020-09-07T22:28:35Z In the Ross Sea embayment during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 18-22ka), the grounding line of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) advanced northwards into the Ross Ice Shelf (RIS). This effectively dammed the drainage of the Transantarctic Mountain outlet glaciers and caused significant downstream thickening of their glacier profiles (Conway et al 1999). The Darwin / Hatherton Glacial System (79.5° S, 158° E) provides a number of sites that contain geological evidence of WAIS fluctuations. Previous geomorphic and pedological studies in the area (Bockheim et al. 1989, Denton & Hughes 2000) have used these sites to constrain the timing and magnitude of the LGM ice sheet advances. As Diamond Hill lies at the confluence of the Darwin Glacier and RIS its glacial geomorphology should reflect the thickening caused by the advancing WAIS. Insitu cosmogenic nuclide dating has being used at sites along the Darwin/Hatherton as a proxy to recreate the timing and magnitude of both WAIS and EAIS advances. By measuring the concentrations of Beryllium-10 and Aluminium-26 in quartz rich lithologies, the time since the deposition of a moraine can be calculated. Early interpretations based on cosmogenic ages from the Lake Wellman area (Fink et al 2009, Storey, et al. 2010) show up to 800 meters of thickened ice approximately 2 million years ago. Moraines previously assumed to be the limit of LGM ice expansion, date to 30-40 ka. This suggests that while early EAIS Quaternary expansion was large; ice volume at the LGM may be little changed from the present. Two transects were sampled on Diamond Hill that cover an altitude range of 1100 meters. Preliminary 10Be cosmogenic dates show a similar trend to that seen further up glacier in Lake Wellman, in the case of Diamond Hill the WAIS was approximately 900 meters thicker than the current Rose Ice Shelf configuration at ~1.5Ma and with only small advances in the last 10ka. As with Lake Wellman no evidence of large scale LGM advances were found. Antarctica New Zealand Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Antarctica New Zealand Darwin Glacier Ice Sheet Ice Shelf Ross Ice Shelf Ross Sea Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation: ANSTO Publications Online Antarctic Bockheim ENVELOPE(161.983,161.983,-78.033,-78.033) Conway ENVELOPE(-61.422,-61.422,-62.841,-62.841) Darwin Glacier ENVELOPE(159.000,159.000,-79.883,-79.883) Diamond Hill ENVELOPE(159.083,159.083,-79.867,-79.867) New Zealand Ross Ice Shelf Ross Sea Wellman ENVELOPE(-61.400,-61.400,-64.483,-64.483) West Antarctic Ice Sheet
institution Open Polar
collection Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation: ANSTO Publications Online
op_collection_id ftansto
language English
topic Antarctica
Ice
Glaciers
Expansion
Beryllium 10
Age estimation
spellingShingle Antarctica
Ice
Glaciers
Expansion
Beryllium 10
Age estimation
Joy, K
Storey, B
Fink, D
Shulmeister, J
Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet?
topic_facet Antarctica
Ice
Glaciers
Expansion
Beryllium 10
Age estimation
description In the Ross Sea embayment during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 18-22ka), the grounding line of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) advanced northwards into the Ross Ice Shelf (RIS). This effectively dammed the drainage of the Transantarctic Mountain outlet glaciers and caused significant downstream thickening of their glacier profiles (Conway et al 1999). The Darwin / Hatherton Glacial System (79.5° S, 158° E) provides a number of sites that contain geological evidence of WAIS fluctuations. Previous geomorphic and pedological studies in the area (Bockheim et al. 1989, Denton & Hughes 2000) have used these sites to constrain the timing and magnitude of the LGM ice sheet advances. As Diamond Hill lies at the confluence of the Darwin Glacier and RIS its glacial geomorphology should reflect the thickening caused by the advancing WAIS. Insitu cosmogenic nuclide dating has being used at sites along the Darwin/Hatherton as a proxy to recreate the timing and magnitude of both WAIS and EAIS advances. By measuring the concentrations of Beryllium-10 and Aluminium-26 in quartz rich lithologies, the time since the deposition of a moraine can be calculated. Early interpretations based on cosmogenic ages from the Lake Wellman area (Fink et al 2009, Storey, et al. 2010) show up to 800 meters of thickened ice approximately 2 million years ago. Moraines previously assumed to be the limit of LGM ice expansion, date to 30-40 ka. This suggests that while early EAIS Quaternary expansion was large; ice volume at the LGM may be little changed from the present. Two transects were sampled on Diamond Hill that cover an altitude range of 1100 meters. Preliminary 10Be cosmogenic dates show a similar trend to that seen further up glacier in Lake Wellman, in the case of Diamond Hill the WAIS was approximately 900 meters thicker than the current Rose Ice Shelf configuration at ~1.5Ma and with only small advances in the last 10ka. As with Lake Wellman no evidence of large scale LGM advances were found. Antarctica New Zealand
format Other/Unknown Material
author Joy, K
Storey, B
Fink, D
Shulmeister, J
author_facet Joy, K
Storey, B
Fink, D
Shulmeister, J
author_sort Joy, K
title Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet?
title_short Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet?
title_full Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet?
title_fullStr Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet?
title_full_unstemmed Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet?
title_sort diamond hill, darwin glacier. a proxy for the west antarctic ice sheet?
publishDate 2010
url http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/2339
long_lat ENVELOPE(161.983,161.983,-78.033,-78.033)
ENVELOPE(-61.422,-61.422,-62.841,-62.841)
ENVELOPE(159.000,159.000,-79.883,-79.883)
ENVELOPE(159.083,159.083,-79.867,-79.867)
ENVELOPE(-61.400,-61.400,-64.483,-64.483)
geographic Antarctic
Bockheim
Conway
Darwin Glacier
Diamond Hill
New Zealand
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Sea
Wellman
West Antarctic Ice Sheet
geographic_facet Antarctic
Bockheim
Conway
Darwin Glacier
Diamond Hill
New Zealand
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Sea
Wellman
West Antarctic Ice Sheet
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Antarctica New Zealand
Darwin Glacier
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Antarctica New Zealand
Darwin Glacier
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Sea
op_relation Joy, K., Storey, B., Fink, D., & Shulmeister, J. (2010). Diamond Hill, Darwin Glacier. A proxy for the West Antarctic ice sheet? Annual Antarctic Conference 2010 - "A Taste of the Ice", 5th – 7th July 2010. In Proceedings of the Annual Antarctic Conference 2010 (p. 57). Christchurch, New Zealand: University of Canterbury.
1176-5798
http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/2339
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