Holocene Fluctuations of Istorvet Ice Cap, Liverpool Land, East Greenland

Greenland, along with the rest of the Arctic, is displaying a significant reaction to warming climate, resulting in considerable ice loss and consequent sea-level rise. Reconstruction of Greenland ice masses during former warm periods can afford context for present-day conditions and allow better pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lusas, Amanda Rose
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@UMaine 2011
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/736
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/1733/viewcontent/LusasA2011.pdf
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Summary:Greenland, along with the rest of the Arctic, is displaying a significant reaction to warming climate, resulting in considerable ice loss and consequent sea-level rise. Reconstruction of Greenland ice masses during former warm periods can afford context for present-day conditions and allow better predictions for the effects of future warming. Small ice caps respond quickly to climate change and therefore are sensitive indicators of past climate. As part of an effort to determine if the current warming is unique in the Holocene and to provide long-term context for present-day events, I identified Holocene fluctuations of Istorvet Ice Cap in east Greenland from sediment cores taken from three glacially fed lakes and one non-glacial control lake. Bone and Round Lakes are closest to the ice margin; they are distal to a fresh, unvegetated, icecored moraine that marks the Little Ice Age (LIA) limit. Emerald Pond is fed through a channel from Round Lake. Snowbank Lake was chosen as a control lake, which allows identification of non-glacial (i.e., flood) events. I used sedimentological characteristics of the cores to identify past glacier fluctuations. In general, gray, inorganic, high magnetic susceptibility, clay-rich sediment indicates more meltwater input to the lake than brown, organic, silt-rich sediment. The same stratigraphic pattern occurs in all three glacially-fed lakes and consists, from the base of the sediments, of: 1) lower gravel and gray clay from early Holocene deglaciation; 2) thick, brown, organic silt relating to an extended period of restricted ice; 3) upper, inorganic, gray clay dating to the LIA; and 4) soupy, organic, brown silt at the surface. Snowbank Lake contained only the basal clay and gravel and the thick, brown, organic section. Radiocarbon dating of an organic mat near the base of Snowbank Lake afforded a minimum age for deglaciation of ~10.5 kyr BP, suggesting that the area probably became ice-free at the end of the Milne Land Stade (of late-glacial age) in east Greenland. Organic ...