The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications
We present Be-10 and Al-26 chronologies from the paleo-Rakaia glacier and the Clearwater lobe of the Rangitata glacier focussing on the transition from the last glaciation maximum (LGM) to the Holocene. From the Rakaia we demonstrate that the local glacial maximum preceded the global LGM by several...
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ftansto:oai:apo-prod.ansto.gov.au:10238/3833 2023-05-15T17:09:26+02:00 The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications Shulmeister, J Fink, D Rother, H Thackray, G 2011-10-18 http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/3833 http://www.inqua2011.ch/?a=programme&subnavi=abstract&id=525 en eng 18th INQUA Congress Shulmeister J., Fink D., Rother H., Thackray G. (2011). The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications. 18th International Union for Quaternary Research Congress, 21th-27th July 2011, Berne Switzerland. http://www.inqua2011.ch/?a=programme&subnavi=abstract&id=525 http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/3833 New Zealand Climates Geomorphology Valleys Ices program Watersheds Conference Presentation 2011 ftansto 2019-12-23T19:02:16Z We present Be-10 and Al-26 chronologies from the paleo-Rakaia glacier and the Clearwater lobe of the Rangitata glacier focussing on the transition from the last glaciation maximum (LGM) to the Holocene. From the Rakaia we demonstrate that the local glacial maximum preceded the global LGM by several thousand years at c. 25 ka. Over the succeeding 12,000 years the glacier retreated only about 10 km and although undated, geomorphic evidence suggests a continued steady retreat after this time. The Clearwater lobe of the Rangitata glacier provides the most detailed LGIT record from any New Zealand glacier because it the valley was protected from significant meltwater flow during the deglaciation. Between 16.4 ka and 13.7 ka the Clearwater ice lobe retreated only 12 km producing 23 closely spaced recessional ice positions. The geomorphology and chronology are categorical in demonstrating that no significant re-advance can have occurred during this period. The inboard termination of the record occurs where the Clearwater valley drops into the main Rangitata Valley and should not be interpreted as the start of the more significant retreat. We highlight that uncertainties in isotope production rates and other elements of cosmogenic age determination (e.g. geomagnetic corrections) means that while we have millenial scale precision on ages during the LGIT, the accuracy of the ages is not as high. Nevertheless, our data clearly demonstrate that the evacuation of ice from these east coast valleys in New Zealand was remarkably slow with glaciers extending to ~60% of their LGM extents at 14 kyr (or younger). There is no evidence for either an early LGIT ice collapse or rapid retreat and consequently no late LGIT major readvance. We contrast our findings with the interpretations of chronologies coming from the Mackenzie Basin and we conclude that the records are compatible, with the chronological differences created by the morphometry of the respective ice catchments.Copyright (c) 2011 INQUA 18 Conference Object Mackenzie Basin Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation: ANSTO Publications Online New Zealand |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation: ANSTO Publications Online |
op_collection_id |
ftansto |
language |
English |
topic |
New Zealand Climates Geomorphology Valleys Ices program Watersheds |
spellingShingle |
New Zealand Climates Geomorphology Valleys Ices program Watersheds Shulmeister, J Fink, D Rother, H Thackray, G The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications |
topic_facet |
New Zealand Climates Geomorphology Valleys Ices program Watersheds |
description |
We present Be-10 and Al-26 chronologies from the paleo-Rakaia glacier and the Clearwater lobe of the Rangitata glacier focussing on the transition from the last glaciation maximum (LGM) to the Holocene. From the Rakaia we demonstrate that the local glacial maximum preceded the global LGM by several thousand years at c. 25 ka. Over the succeeding 12,000 years the glacier retreated only about 10 km and although undated, geomorphic evidence suggests a continued steady retreat after this time. The Clearwater lobe of the Rangitata glacier provides the most detailed LGIT record from any New Zealand glacier because it the valley was protected from significant meltwater flow during the deglaciation. Between 16.4 ka and 13.7 ka the Clearwater ice lobe retreated only 12 km producing 23 closely spaced recessional ice positions. The geomorphology and chronology are categorical in demonstrating that no significant re-advance can have occurred during this period. The inboard termination of the record occurs where the Clearwater valley drops into the main Rangitata Valley and should not be interpreted as the start of the more significant retreat. We highlight that uncertainties in isotope production rates and other elements of cosmogenic age determination (e.g. geomagnetic corrections) means that while we have millenial scale precision on ages during the LGIT, the accuracy of the ages is not as high. Nevertheless, our data clearly demonstrate that the evacuation of ice from these east coast valleys in New Zealand was remarkably slow with glaciers extending to ~60% of their LGM extents at 14 kyr (or younger). There is no evidence for either an early LGIT ice collapse or rapid retreat and consequently no late LGIT major readvance. We contrast our findings with the interpretations of chronologies coming from the Mackenzie Basin and we conclude that the records are compatible, with the chronological differences created by the morphometry of the respective ice catchments.Copyright (c) 2011 INQUA 18 |
format |
Conference Object |
author |
Shulmeister, J Fink, D Rother, H Thackray, G |
author_facet |
Shulmeister, J Fink, D Rother, H Thackray, G |
author_sort |
Shulmeister, J |
title |
The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications |
title_short |
The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications |
title_full |
The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications |
title_fullStr |
The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications |
title_full_unstemmed |
The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications |
title_sort |
chronology of the last deglaciation from two new zealand valleys and some climatic implications |
publisher |
18th INQUA Congress |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/3833 http://www.inqua2011.ch/?a=programme&subnavi=abstract&id=525 |
geographic |
New Zealand |
geographic_facet |
New Zealand |
genre |
Mackenzie Basin |
genre_facet |
Mackenzie Basin |
op_relation |
Shulmeister J., Fink D., Rother H., Thackray G. (2011). The chronology of the last deglaciation from two New Zealand valleys and some climatic implications. 18th International Union for Quaternary Research Congress, 21th-27th July 2011, Berne Switzerland. http://www.inqua2011.ch/?a=programme&subnavi=abstract&id=525 http://apo.ansto.gov.au/dspace/handle/10238/3833 |
_version_ |
1766065533701062656 |