Contrasting modes of deglaciation between fjords and inter-fjord areas in eastern North Greenland

Knowledge about the deglaciation history of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) is important to put the recent observations of ice loss into a longer-term perspective. In southern Greenland, the deglaciation history is generally well constrained. In this study, we use 43 new 10 Be surface exposure ages c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Boreas
Main Authors: Larsen, Nicolaj K., Søndergaard, Anne Sofie, Levy, Laura B., Olsen, Jesper, Strunk, Astrid, Bjørk, Anders A., Skov, Daniel
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/contrasting-modes-of-deglaciation-between-fjords-and-interfjord-areas-in-eastern-north-greenland(f2ac56d0-00b4-489b-9714-a42147d0a205).html
https://doi.org/10.1111/bor.12475
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Summary:Knowledge about the deglaciation history of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) is important to put the recent observations of ice loss into a longer-term perspective. In southern Greenland, the deglaciation history is generally well constrained. In this study, we use 43 new 10 Be surface exposure ages combined with existing minimum-limiting 14 C ages to constrain the deglaciation history of eastern North Greenland, including the three major fjord systems – Independence Fjord, Hagen Fjord and Danmark Fjord. The 10 Be ages are generally scattered and many of the samples are significantly older than expected, with pre-LGM ages being a result of inheritance from previous exposures. By using a Bayesian statistical approach to combine the new 10 Be ages and existing 14 C ages, we are able to constrain the deglaciation history. We find that the outer coast and deep fjords were rapidly deglaciated between ̃11 and 10 ka. Subsequently, the deglaciation progressed far inland up the fjords, probably as a result of increased summer surface temperatures and subsurface ocean temperatures during the Holocene Thermal Maximum. The rapid retreat of the Middle Holocene slowed when the ice sheet became land-based in the central and southern part of the study area where the ice margin first reached its present extent by ̃6.7 ka. As the onset of Neoglacial ice advance had already commenced at ̃5 ka this limits the period when the ice margin could retreat farther inland and it probably remained within max. 30–40 km of its present extent. The contrasting behaviour between the fjords and inter-fjord areas shows a clear topographic effect on the stability of the GrIS. These results inform how the GrIS may respond to a warmer climate in various topographic settings and may provide useful constraints for future ice-sheet models.