Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change

General global cooling and temperature fluctuation accompanied by expansion of mountain glaciers characterized the Little Ice Age of about A.D. 1200 through A.D. 1900. The effects of such temperature changes appear first and are strongest at high latitudes. Therefore the Little Ice Age record of gla...

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Main Authors: Calkin, Parker E., Wiles, Gregory C.
Other Authors: STATE UNIV OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO AMHERST
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1992
Subjects:
ICE
Ice
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADP007349
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADP007349
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spelling ftdtic:ADP007349 2023-05-15T16:22:34+02:00 Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change Calkin, Parker E. Wiles, Gregory C. STATE UNIV OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO AMHERST 1992-03 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADP007349 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADP007349 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADP007349 APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE DTIC AND NTIS Geography Snow Ice and Permafrost Meteorology *ALASKA *COOLING *GLACIERS *GLOBAL *MOUNTAINS *TEMPERATURE ALTITUDE EXPANSION FJORDS HIGH LATITUDES ICE INTERVALS MEAN MODELS PERIODIC VARIATIONS RECORDS STOPPING SUMMER TEST AND EVALUATION SYMPOSIA Component Reports *Little Ice Age *Global climatic changes Holocene era Maritime Southern Alaska Fjord-calving glaciers Text 1992 ftdtic 2016-02-19T17:39:52Z General global cooling and temperature fluctuation accompanied by expansion of mountain glaciers characterized the Little Ice Age of about A.D. 1200 through A.D. 1900. The effects of such temperature changes appear first and are strongest at high latitudes. Therefore the Little Ice Age record of glacial fluctuation in Alaska may provide a good proxy for these events and a test for models of future climatic change. Holocene expansions began here as early as 7000 B.P. and locally show a periodicity of 350 years after about 4500 years B.P. The Little Ice Age followed a late Holocene interval of minor ice advance and a subsequent period of ice margin recession lasting one to seven centuries. The timing of expansions since about A.D. 1200 have often varied between glaciers, but these are the most pervasive glacial events of the Holocene in Alaska and frequently represent ice marginal maxima for this interval. At least two major expansions are, apparent in forefields of both land-terminating and fjord-calving glaciers, but the former display the most reliable and detailed climatic record. Major maxima occurred by the 16th century and into the mid-18th century. Culmination of advances occurred throughout Alaska during the 19th century followed within a few decades by general glacial retreat. Concurrently, equilibrium line altitudes have been raised 100-400 m, representing a rise of 2-3 deg C in mean summer temperature. This article is from 'Proceedings of the International Conference on the Role of the Polar Regions in Global Change Held in Fairbanks, Alaska on 11-15 June 1990. Volume 2', AD-A253 028, p617-625. See also Volume 1, AD-A253 027. Text glaciers Ice permafrost Alaska Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database Fairbanks
institution Open Polar
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
op_collection_id ftdtic
language English
topic Geography
Snow
Ice and Permafrost
Meteorology
*ALASKA
*COOLING
*GLACIERS
*GLOBAL
*MOUNTAINS
*TEMPERATURE
ALTITUDE
EXPANSION
FJORDS
HIGH LATITUDES
ICE
INTERVALS
MEAN
MODELS
PERIODIC VARIATIONS
RECORDS
STOPPING
SUMMER
TEST AND EVALUATION
SYMPOSIA
Component Reports
*Little Ice Age
*Global climatic changes
Holocene era
Maritime Southern Alaska
Fjord-calving glaciers
spellingShingle Geography
Snow
Ice and Permafrost
Meteorology
*ALASKA
*COOLING
*GLACIERS
*GLOBAL
*MOUNTAINS
*TEMPERATURE
ALTITUDE
EXPANSION
FJORDS
HIGH LATITUDES
ICE
INTERVALS
MEAN
MODELS
PERIODIC VARIATIONS
RECORDS
STOPPING
SUMMER
TEST AND EVALUATION
SYMPOSIA
Component Reports
*Little Ice Age
*Global climatic changes
Holocene era
Maritime Southern Alaska
Fjord-calving glaciers
Calkin, Parker E.
Wiles, Gregory C.
Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change
topic_facet Geography
Snow
Ice and Permafrost
Meteorology
*ALASKA
*COOLING
*GLACIERS
*GLOBAL
*MOUNTAINS
*TEMPERATURE
ALTITUDE
EXPANSION
FJORDS
HIGH LATITUDES
ICE
INTERVALS
MEAN
MODELS
PERIODIC VARIATIONS
RECORDS
STOPPING
SUMMER
TEST AND EVALUATION
SYMPOSIA
Component Reports
*Little Ice Age
*Global climatic changes
Holocene era
Maritime Southern Alaska
Fjord-calving glaciers
description General global cooling and temperature fluctuation accompanied by expansion of mountain glaciers characterized the Little Ice Age of about A.D. 1200 through A.D. 1900. The effects of such temperature changes appear first and are strongest at high latitudes. Therefore the Little Ice Age record of glacial fluctuation in Alaska may provide a good proxy for these events and a test for models of future climatic change. Holocene expansions began here as early as 7000 B.P. and locally show a periodicity of 350 years after about 4500 years B.P. The Little Ice Age followed a late Holocene interval of minor ice advance and a subsequent period of ice margin recession lasting one to seven centuries. The timing of expansions since about A.D. 1200 have often varied between glaciers, but these are the most pervasive glacial events of the Holocene in Alaska and frequently represent ice marginal maxima for this interval. At least two major expansions are, apparent in forefields of both land-terminating and fjord-calving glaciers, but the former display the most reliable and detailed climatic record. Major maxima occurred by the 16th century and into the mid-18th century. Culmination of advances occurred throughout Alaska during the 19th century followed within a few decades by general glacial retreat. Concurrently, equilibrium line altitudes have been raised 100-400 m, representing a rise of 2-3 deg C in mean summer temperature. This article is from 'Proceedings of the International Conference on the Role of the Polar Regions in Global Change Held in Fairbanks, Alaska on 11-15 June 1990. Volume 2', AD-A253 028, p617-625. See also Volume 1, AD-A253 027.
author2 STATE UNIV OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO AMHERST
format Text
author Calkin, Parker E.
Wiles, Gregory C.
author_facet Calkin, Parker E.
Wiles, Gregory C.
author_sort Calkin, Parker E.
title Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change
title_short Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change
title_full Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change
title_fullStr Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change
title_full_unstemmed Little Ice Age Glaciation in Alaska: A Record of Recent Global Climatic Change
title_sort little ice age glaciation in alaska: a record of recent global climatic change
publishDate 1992
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADP007349
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADP007349
geographic Fairbanks
geographic_facet Fairbanks
genre glaciers
Ice
permafrost
Alaska
genre_facet glaciers
Ice
permafrost
Alaska
op_source DTIC AND NTIS
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADP007349
op_rights APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
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