Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.

Landscapes of northern Canada are often associated with subglacial erosion during the Quaternary glaciations; however, the rates and spatial pattern of subglacial erosion are unknown. Terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides (TCN) extracted from glaciated bedrock and till provide a new method to iden...

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Main Author: Staiger, Jane K. Willenbring.
Other Authors: Ph.D.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Dalhousie University 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/54809
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/54809 2023-05-15T14:59:06+02:00 Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling. Staiger, Jane K. Willenbring. Ph.D. 2014-10-21T12:36:32Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/54809 eng eng Dalhousie University AAINR16718 http://hdl.handle.net/10222/54809 Geology text 2014 ftdalhouse 2021-12-29T18:11:37Z Landscapes of northern Canada are often associated with subglacial erosion during the Quaternary glaciations; however, the rates and spatial pattern of subglacial erosion are unknown. Terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides (TCN) extracted from glaciated bedrock and till provide a new method to identify paleo-glacier basal thermal conditions. Differential preservation of pre-glacially produced TCN reflects the degree of glacial erosion. In warm-based zones, subglacial erosion stripped the upper few metres of regolith and bedrock and effectively removed the pre-glacial TCN. In cold-based subglacial conditions, the ice was frozen to the bed and the inherited TCN concentration survived. Measurements of TCN concentrations from bedrock indicate that the valleys were eroded > 2.5 metres during a glacial-interglacial cycle. On summit plateaus, however, the long-term erosion rate is < 1.4 m/Ma. The juxtaposition of erosive ice in valleys and non-erosive ice atop interfluve plateaus has generated relief in arctic and sub-arctic regions. Tills with monolithologic, angular clasts associated with cold-based ice contain 2--50 times the TCN concentration of silt-rich tills with polylithologic, striated clasts associated with warm-based ice. Measurement of minimum ice burial durations of >3 Ma suggest that recently deglaciated surfaces near modern ice caps may have been covered by cold-based ice since Pliocene time. Identifying cold-based anomalies in basal sliding is an obstacle to interpreting glacial dispersal patterns for mineral exploration. Glacial erosion and till production are inferred to be functions of the thermal regime at the base of glacier ice and are tested by linking the distribution of TCN in bedrock and till with modelled basal thermal conditions using the University of Maine Ice Sheet Model (UMISM). TCN-derived glacial erosion rates vary linearly with modelled average sliding velocity by a glacial erosion coefficient of 5x10-7---three orders of magnitude lower than in other regions. Quaternary ice sheets and the driving global cooling during glaciations cause synoptic atmospheric pressure fluctuations from katabatic winds and atmospheric compression. Modelled atmospheric pressure changes due to presence of global ice sheets produces up to a 10% difference in TCN production rates for samples exposed near ice sheets and at high elevations during glaciations when compared to present-day production rates. Thesis (Ph.D.)--Dalhousie University (Canada), 2006. Text Arctic glacier* Ice Sheet Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic Geology
spellingShingle Geology
Staiger, Jane K. Willenbring.
Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.
topic_facet Geology
description Landscapes of northern Canada are often associated with subglacial erosion during the Quaternary glaciations; however, the rates and spatial pattern of subglacial erosion are unknown. Terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides (TCN) extracted from glaciated bedrock and till provide a new method to identify paleo-glacier basal thermal conditions. Differential preservation of pre-glacially produced TCN reflects the degree of glacial erosion. In warm-based zones, subglacial erosion stripped the upper few metres of regolith and bedrock and effectively removed the pre-glacial TCN. In cold-based subglacial conditions, the ice was frozen to the bed and the inherited TCN concentration survived. Measurements of TCN concentrations from bedrock indicate that the valleys were eroded > 2.5 metres during a glacial-interglacial cycle. On summit plateaus, however, the long-term erosion rate is < 1.4 m/Ma. The juxtaposition of erosive ice in valleys and non-erosive ice atop interfluve plateaus has generated relief in arctic and sub-arctic regions. Tills with monolithologic, angular clasts associated with cold-based ice contain 2--50 times the TCN concentration of silt-rich tills with polylithologic, striated clasts associated with warm-based ice. Measurement of minimum ice burial durations of >3 Ma suggest that recently deglaciated surfaces near modern ice caps may have been covered by cold-based ice since Pliocene time. Identifying cold-based anomalies in basal sliding is an obstacle to interpreting glacial dispersal patterns for mineral exploration. Glacial erosion and till production are inferred to be functions of the thermal regime at the base of glacier ice and are tested by linking the distribution of TCN in bedrock and till with modelled basal thermal conditions using the University of Maine Ice Sheet Model (UMISM). TCN-derived glacial erosion rates vary linearly with modelled average sliding velocity by a glacial erosion coefficient of 5x10-7---three orders of magnitude lower than in other regions. Quaternary ice sheets and the driving global cooling during glaciations cause synoptic atmospheric pressure fluctuations from katabatic winds and atmospheric compression. Modelled atmospheric pressure changes due to presence of global ice sheets produces up to a 10% difference in TCN production rates for samples exposed near ice sheets and at high elevations during glaciations when compared to present-day production rates. Thesis (Ph.D.)--Dalhousie University (Canada), 2006.
author2 Ph.D.
format Text
author Staiger, Jane K. Willenbring.
author_facet Staiger, Jane K. Willenbring.
author_sort Staiger, Jane K. Willenbring.
title Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.
title_short Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.
title_full Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.
title_fullStr Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.
title_full_unstemmed Glacial erosion in Atlantic and Arctic Canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.
title_sort glacial erosion in atlantic and arctic canada determined by terrestrial in situ cosmogenic nuclides and ice sheet modelling.
publisher Dalhousie University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/54809
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
glacier*
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Arctic
glacier*
Ice Sheet
op_relation AAINR16718
http://hdl.handle.net/10222/54809
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