Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes

We present 21Ne exposure ages of erosional glaciogenic rock surfaces on nunataks in northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: i) in the Prince Albert Mountains and ii) near Mesa Range. These nunataks are located directly at the margin of the polar plateau and therefore provide an immediate record of ice v...

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Main Authors: Oberholzer, P., Baroni, C., Salvatore, M.C., Baur, H., Wieler, R.
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://doc.rero.ch/record/295322/files/S095410200700079X.pdf
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spelling ftreroch:oai:doc.rero.ch:295322 2023-05-15T13:31:30+02:00 Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes Oberholzer, P. Baroni, C. Salvatore, M.C. Baur, H. Wieler, R. 2017-08-02T19:38:05Z http://doc.rero.ch/record/295322/files/S095410200700079X.pdf eng eng http://doc.rero.ch/record/295322/files/S095410200700079X.pdf 2017 ftreroch 2023-02-16T17:28:28Z We present 21Ne exposure ages of erosional glaciogenic rock surfaces on nunataks in northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: i) in the Prince Albert Mountains and ii) near Mesa Range. These nunataks are located directly at the margin of the polar plateau and therefore provide an immediate record of ice volume changes of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, not biased by ice shelf grounding or narrow valley sections downstream the outlet glaciers. The sampling locations overlook the present ice surface by less than 200 m, but were last covered by ice 3.5 Ma bp (minimum age, not corrected for erosion). This strongly indicates that the ice sheet has not been substantially thicker than today since at least the early Pliocene, which supports the hypothesis of a stable East Antarctic Ice Sheet. First absolute ages are reported for the alpine topography above the erosive trimline that typically marks the upper limit of glacial activity in northern Victoria Land. Unexpectedly low nuclide concentrations suggest that erosion rates on the alpine topography are considerably higher due to the steep slopes than those affecting flat erosional surfaces carrying Antarctic tors Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Ice Sheet Ice Shelf Victoria Land RERO DOC Digital Library Antarctic East Antarctic Ice Sheet Mesa Range ENVELOPE(162.917,162.917,-73.183,-73.183) Polar Plateau ENVELOPE(0.000,0.000,-90.000,-90.000) Prince Albert Mountains ENVELOPE(161.500,161.500,-76.000,-76.000) Victoria ENVELOPE(-69.895,-69.895,80.792,80.792) Victoria Land
institution Open Polar
collection RERO DOC Digital Library
op_collection_id ftreroch
language English
description We present 21Ne exposure ages of erosional glaciogenic rock surfaces on nunataks in northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: i) in the Prince Albert Mountains and ii) near Mesa Range. These nunataks are located directly at the margin of the polar plateau and therefore provide an immediate record of ice volume changes of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, not biased by ice shelf grounding or narrow valley sections downstream the outlet glaciers. The sampling locations overlook the present ice surface by less than 200 m, but were last covered by ice 3.5 Ma bp (minimum age, not corrected for erosion). This strongly indicates that the ice sheet has not been substantially thicker than today since at least the early Pliocene, which supports the hypothesis of a stable East Antarctic Ice Sheet. First absolute ages are reported for the alpine topography above the erosive trimline that typically marks the upper limit of glacial activity in northern Victoria Land. Unexpectedly low nuclide concentrations suggest that erosion rates on the alpine topography are considerably higher due to the steep slopes than those affecting flat erosional surfaces carrying Antarctic tors
author Oberholzer, P.
Baroni, C.
Salvatore, M.C.
Baur, H.
Wieler, R.
spellingShingle Oberholzer, P.
Baroni, C.
Salvatore, M.C.
Baur, H.
Wieler, R.
Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes
author_facet Oberholzer, P.
Baroni, C.
Salvatore, M.C.
Baur, H.
Wieler, R.
author_sort Oberholzer, P.
title Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes
title_short Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes
title_full Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes
title_fullStr Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes
title_full_unstemmed Dating late Cenozoic erosional surfaces in Victoria Land, Antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes
title_sort dating late cenozoic erosional surfaces in victoria land, antarctica, with cosmogenic neon in pyroxenes
publishDate 2017
url http://doc.rero.ch/record/295322/files/S095410200700079X.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.917,162.917,-73.183,-73.183)
ENVELOPE(0.000,0.000,-90.000,-90.000)
ENVELOPE(161.500,161.500,-76.000,-76.000)
ENVELOPE(-69.895,-69.895,80.792,80.792)
geographic Antarctic
East Antarctic Ice Sheet
Mesa Range
Polar Plateau
Prince Albert Mountains
Victoria
Victoria Land
geographic_facet Antarctic
East Antarctic Ice Sheet
Mesa Range
Polar Plateau
Prince Albert Mountains
Victoria
Victoria Land
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Victoria Land
op_relation http://doc.rero.ch/record/295322/files/S095410200700079X.pdf
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