Evidence for Quaternary Ice-mass Fluctuations of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet: Interpretations From a Relative Sea Level Reconstruction in the Amundsen Sea and Geophysical Surveys in West Antarctica

Determining the past timing and extent of ice volume changes of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) remains essential for forecasting the rate and magnitude of retreat of the WAIS in the coming decades and centuries. Records of when the WAIS was last smaller than present are sparse and the limited e...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Braddock, Scott
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@UMaine 2024
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/3983
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/5054/viewcontent/D_Braddock_Scott_May24.pdf
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Summary:Determining the past timing and extent of ice volume changes of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) remains essential for forecasting the rate and magnitude of retreat of the WAIS in the coming decades and centuries. Records of when the WAIS was last smaller than present are sparse and the limited evidence for reduced ice volumes remains a critical gap to address in the paleoclimate community. In this thesis, I examine two lines of evidence of ice volume changes for the WAIS through a relative sea level reconstruction in the Amundsen Sea and from radar observations from field sites across the ice sheet. The relative sea level reconstruction shows that for the Amundsen Sea Sector, ice remained relatively stable for the last 5.5 ka and that the current bedrock uplift rates are an order of magnitude larger than the observed RSL fall during that same period. Conversely, evidence from radar observations collected at sites across the WAIS shows evidence of previous ice surfaces at depths of tens of meters below the modern ice surface and highlight the usefulness of radar studies, that when paired with the collection of ice cores or subglacial bedrock, can provide the timing of readvances. Further, in this thesis I summarize the challenges and successes for the retrieval of subglacial bedrock samples for cosmogenic nuclide analysis from five field campaigns in West Antarctica. This method provides direct evidence for the timing of WAIS retreat during past warm periods but is difficult due to technological and logistical limitations. I focus the findings on drilling efforts and technology and geophysical surveys with ground-penetrating radar and find that 1) a dedicated ground-penetrating radar survey by a practiced geophysicists is necessary given the complex nature of ice near margins, 2) drilling campaigns should start at shallow depths and progress to deeper sites to provide ground truth results for radar surveys and to limit time dedicated to troubleshooting drilling operations, 3) target locations with a clean ...