Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes

Direct evidence for the response of Earth’s largest continental ice mass, the East Antarctic ice sheet (EAIS), to climatic warmth is extremely limited. The primary aim of this thesis is to improve understanding of the behaviour of the EAIS during the warmer-than-present Pliocene Epoch (2.58 to 5.33...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cook, Carys Patricia
Other Authors: van De Flierdt, Tina, Imperial College London
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Imperial College London 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/14262
https://doi.org/10.25560/14262
id ftimperialcol:oai:spiral.imperial.ac.uk:10044/1/14262
record_format openpolar
spelling ftimperialcol:oai:spiral.imperial.ac.uk:10044/1/14262 2023-05-15T14:01:35+02:00 Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes Cook, Carys Patricia van De Flierdt, Tina Imperial College London 2013-10 http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/14262 https://doi.org/10.25560/14262 unknown Imperial College London Earth Science and Engineering Thesis or dissertation Doctoral Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) 2013 ftimperialcol https://doi.org/10.25560/14262 2019-11-14T23:38:29Z Direct evidence for the response of Earth’s largest continental ice mass, the East Antarctic ice sheet (EAIS), to climatic warmth is extremely limited. The primary aim of this thesis is to improve understanding of the behaviour of the EAIS during the warmer-than-present Pliocene Epoch (2.58 to 5.33 million years ago). To this end, I analysed the radiogenic neodymium and strontium isotopic provenance of fine-grained (<63μm) Pliocene detrital marine sediments deposited offshore of the East Antarctic continent, which can provide information on source bedrock characteristics, continental erosional patterns and marine sediment depositional processes. In addition, I also analysed argon isotopic ages of ice-rafted hornblende grains (>150μm), to infer sites of major iceberg production events through time. Within this thesis, I present Pliocene marine sediment data from various cores drilled from the East Antarctic margin, thereby developing a detailed framework for linking provenance variability to ice sheet behaviour. My key findings have been collated into five distinct chapters, providing: i) the first evidence for significant retreat of the EAIS in the low-lying Wilkes Subglacial Basin in response to the earliest Pliocene climatic warmth; ii) insights into the benefits and pitfalls associated with utilising different tools in glaciomarine sediment provenance studies; iii) constraints on the behaviour of the EAIS and West Antarctic ice sheet during the warmth of Pleistocene super-interglacial, Marine Isotope Stage 31; iv) insights into the role of declining sea surface termperatures during the Pliocene on the flux and provenance of distally sourced ice-rafted detritus, along with evidence for potential ice sheet destabilisation events in the Aurora Subglacial Basin during Pliocene interglacials; and v) advances in understanding of the evolution of the EAIS during the Late Pliocene climatic transition, and its role in global Pliocene climate change. Hence, the findings presented within this thesis provide new and significant evidence for the behaviour of the EAIS during the Pliocene, and suggest it has in the past been more sensitive to climatic change than previously realised. Open Access Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Ice Sheet Iceberg* Imperial College London: Spiral Antarctic East Antarctic Ice Sheet West Antarctic Ice Sheet Wilkes Subglacial Basin ENVELOPE(145.000,145.000,-75.000,-75.000)
institution Open Polar
collection Imperial College London: Spiral
op_collection_id ftimperialcol
language unknown
description Direct evidence for the response of Earth’s largest continental ice mass, the East Antarctic ice sheet (EAIS), to climatic warmth is extremely limited. The primary aim of this thesis is to improve understanding of the behaviour of the EAIS during the warmer-than-present Pliocene Epoch (2.58 to 5.33 million years ago). To this end, I analysed the radiogenic neodymium and strontium isotopic provenance of fine-grained (<63μm) Pliocene detrital marine sediments deposited offshore of the East Antarctic continent, which can provide information on source bedrock characteristics, continental erosional patterns and marine sediment depositional processes. In addition, I also analysed argon isotopic ages of ice-rafted hornblende grains (>150μm), to infer sites of major iceberg production events through time. Within this thesis, I present Pliocene marine sediment data from various cores drilled from the East Antarctic margin, thereby developing a detailed framework for linking provenance variability to ice sheet behaviour. My key findings have been collated into five distinct chapters, providing: i) the first evidence for significant retreat of the EAIS in the low-lying Wilkes Subglacial Basin in response to the earliest Pliocene climatic warmth; ii) insights into the benefits and pitfalls associated with utilising different tools in glaciomarine sediment provenance studies; iii) constraints on the behaviour of the EAIS and West Antarctic ice sheet during the warmth of Pleistocene super-interglacial, Marine Isotope Stage 31; iv) insights into the role of declining sea surface termperatures during the Pliocene on the flux and provenance of distally sourced ice-rafted detritus, along with evidence for potential ice sheet destabilisation events in the Aurora Subglacial Basin during Pliocene interglacials; and v) advances in understanding of the evolution of the EAIS during the Late Pliocene climatic transition, and its role in global Pliocene climate change. Hence, the findings presented within this thesis provide new and significant evidence for the behaviour of the EAIS during the Pliocene, and suggest it has in the past been more sensitive to climatic change than previously realised. Open Access
author2 van De Flierdt, Tina
Imperial College London
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Cook, Carys Patricia
spellingShingle Cook, Carys Patricia
Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes
author_facet Cook, Carys Patricia
author_sort Cook, Carys Patricia
title Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes
title_short Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes
title_full Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes
title_fullStr Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes
title_full_unstemmed Insights into the behaviour of the Pliocene East Antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes
title_sort insights into the behaviour of the pliocene east antarctic ice sheet from provenance studies of marine sediments using radiogenic isotopoes
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/14262
https://doi.org/10.25560/14262
long_lat ENVELOPE(145.000,145.000,-75.000,-75.000)
geographic Antarctic
East Antarctic Ice Sheet
West Antarctic Ice Sheet
Wilkes Subglacial Basin
geographic_facet Antarctic
East Antarctic Ice Sheet
West Antarctic Ice Sheet
Wilkes Subglacial Basin
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Sheet
Iceberg*
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Sheet
Iceberg*
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25560/14262
_version_ 1766271514110328832