Deglacier variability of the Filcher Ice Shelf, Antarctica

The Weddell Sea Embayment (WSE) in Antarctica is one of the least explored environments on Earth. Ice streams and glaciers draining into it discharge more than 22 % of Antartic continental ice to the Southern Ocean. Due to extensive sea ice cover and harsh weather conditions throughout the year, thi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lamping, Nele
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Univ. Bremen 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/42177/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.48935
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Summary:The Weddell Sea Embayment (WSE) in Antarctica is one of the least explored environments on Earth. Ice streams and glaciers draining into it discharge more than 22 % of Antartic continental ice to the Southern Ocean. Due to extensive sea ice cover and harsh weather conditions throughout the year, this region is largely inaccessible, leaving it with only sparse knowledge about the deglacial history since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Understanding the post–LGM evolution of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) in this sector is crucial in order to test and calibrate numerical ice sheet models that aim at predicting future AIS stability and dynamics. Especially the grounded ice sheet extent and retreat history within the cross–shelf Filchner Trough, a paleo–ice stream trough incising the southern continental shelf of the WSE, is controversial. For this thesis I investigated giant gravity cores (GGC) recovered from the deepest parts of the inner Filchner Trough, just seawards the ice shelf edge position during the Austral summer 1987/1988. Apart from describing the sedimentary lithologies and structures, a multi–proxy approach, including the determination of grain–size distributions, TC/TOC contents, magnetic susceptibilities, water contents and shear strengths has been applied in order to define sedimentary facies. Furthermore, ten new and reliable 14C radiocarbon ages, derived from calcareous foraminifera, are provided in order to reach a better understanding about the deglacial history of the WSE. Detailed analyses of the sediments reveal a retreat stratigraphy on the southern Wed-dell Sea continental shelf, containing distal glaciomarine sediments overlying sediments that have been deposited rather proximal to the ice sheets grounding line (GL). The distinction between these two sedimentary facies is largely based on grain–size analysis, determination of water contents, wet bulk densities (WBD) and shear strengths. These results in combination with the constrained 14C radiocarbon ages indicate that since the last ~5.8 ...