Towards a reconstruction of Marion Island’s glacial history

Southern Hemisphere glacial chronologies can provide valuable insights into interactions between glaciation and past climate changes. The sub-Antarctic Islands provide a valuable terrestrial record of glacial chronologies for the Southern Hemisphere, since they are unique, not only in size and topog...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rudolph, Elizabeth
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Fort Hare 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10353/18531
https://corycommons.ru.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:42581
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Summary:Southern Hemisphere glacial chronologies can provide valuable insights into interactions between glaciation and past climate changes. The sub-Antarctic Islands provide a valuable terrestrial record of glacial chronologies for the Southern Hemisphere, since they are unique, not only in size and topography, but also in oceanic situation when compared to other continental landmasses (e.g. Antarctica or Patagonia). On sub-Antarctic Marion Island, southern Indian Ocean, the exact timing and extent of the local Last Glacial Maximum is not yet known as glacial reconstructions have mostly been based on palynological proxies and relative-age dating techniques. This study presents 29 cosmogenic 36Cl exposure ages of deglaciated bedrock surfaces and moraine deposits from Marion Island. In addition, a comprehensive glacial-geomorphological map, which in conjunction with exposure ages provide improved temporal and spatial constraints for the island’s glacial history. Results show that the ice reached a local Last Glacial Maximum before 56 ka ago and retreated, with minor stillstands, until ~17 ka. This early deglaciation left island surfaces below 850 m a.s.l. ice-free after ~19 ka, and any subsequent advances during the Late Glacial or Holocene cooling periods would have been restricted to the interior. This glacial chronology is similar to that of some other sub-Antarctic Islands (e.g. the Kerguelen archipelago, Auckland and Campbell islands, and possibly South Georgia) and a number of other Southern Hemisphere glaciers (e.g. in Patagonia and New Zealand) and adds to evidence that suggest the Southern Hemisphere was in a glacial maximum earlier than the global LGM. A combination of climatic drivers such as declining temperatures, a northward migration of oceanic fronts and the Southern Hemisphere Westerly Winds (causing precipitation changes), as well as the physiography of Marion Island, created optimal conditions for glacier growth during Marine Isotope Stage 4 (MIS 4; ~65 ka ago) instead of the global LGM in MIS 2 (~18 ...