Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology

Understanding the provenance of ice-rafted debris (IRD) provides a means to link the behavior of individual ice sheets to proxy records of climate change. Here we present a new approach to determining IRD provenance using U-Pb geochronology of detrital minerals rutile and zircon. We characterize pot...

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Published in:Geology
Main Authors: Small, D., Parrish, R., Austin, W., Cawood, P., Rinterknecht, V.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/86504/
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author Small, D.
Parrish, R.
Austin, W.
Cawood, P.
Rinterknecht, V.
author_facet Small, D.
Parrish, R.
Austin, W.
Cawood, P.
Rinterknecht, V.
author_sort Small, D.
collection University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications
container_issue 2
container_start_page 155
container_title Geology
container_volume 41
description Understanding the provenance of ice-rafted debris (IRD) provides a means to link the behavior of individual ice sheets to proxy records of climate change. Here we present a new approach to determining IRD provenance using U-Pb geochronology of detrital minerals rutile and zircon. We characterize potential source regions from Scotland using detrital rutile from modern fluvial systems, and demonstrate that their unimodal rutile U-Pb ages reflect the timing of the last amphibolite facies metamorphism of the source rocks, imparting a distinctive source signature. Contrasts between these spectra and the bimodal IRD (ca. 470 Ma and ca. 1800–2000 Ma) rutile age signatures rule out Scotland as the sole source and suggest a Laurentian contribution; IRD zircon ages further support this view. U-Pb mineral dating has the potential to provide new insight on IRD provenance, because it allows linkage between IRD and individual source terranes based on their differing magmatic and tectonothermal histories. The occurrence of Laurentian-sourced IRD proximal to Scotland demonstrates widespread and rapid dispersal of debris across the subpolar North Atlantic during the Older Dryas cold oscillation, and implicates the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation as a control. This highlights the sensitivity of some IRD records to rapid climate change during the last deglaciation and supports the interpretation of Heinrich events as time-parallel marker horizons.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
id ftuglasgow:oai:eprints.gla.ac.uk:86504
institution Open Polar
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op_container_end_page 158
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1130/G33594.1
op_relation Small, D. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/19797.html>, Parrish, R. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/26429.html>, Austin, W., Cawood, P. and Rinterknecht, V. (2013) Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology. Geology <https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/journal_volume/Geology.html>, 41(2), pp. 155-1582. (doi:10.1130/G33594.1 <https://doi.org/10.1130/G33594.1>)
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spelling ftuglasgow:oai:eprints.gla.ac.uk:86504 2025-04-13T14:23:40+00:00 Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology Small, D. Parrish, R. Austin, W. Cawood, P. Rinterknecht, V. 2013 https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/86504/ unknown Small, D. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/19797.html>, Parrish, R. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/26429.html>, Austin, W., Cawood, P. and Rinterknecht, V. (2013) Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology. Geology <https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/journal_volume/Geology.html>, 41(2), pp. 155-1582. (doi:10.1130/G33594.1 <https://doi.org/10.1130/G33594.1>) GB Physical geography QE Geology Articles PeerReviewed 2013 ftuglasgow https://doi.org/10.1130/G33594.1 2025-03-20T13:10:03Z Understanding the provenance of ice-rafted debris (IRD) provides a means to link the behavior of individual ice sheets to proxy records of climate change. Here we present a new approach to determining IRD provenance using U-Pb geochronology of detrital minerals rutile and zircon. We characterize potential source regions from Scotland using detrital rutile from modern fluvial systems, and demonstrate that their unimodal rutile U-Pb ages reflect the timing of the last amphibolite facies metamorphism of the source rocks, imparting a distinctive source signature. Contrasts between these spectra and the bimodal IRD (ca. 470 Ma and ca. 1800–2000 Ma) rutile age signatures rule out Scotland as the sole source and suggest a Laurentian contribution; IRD zircon ages further support this view. U-Pb mineral dating has the potential to provide new insight on IRD provenance, because it allows linkage between IRD and individual source terranes based on their differing magmatic and tectonothermal histories. The occurrence of Laurentian-sourced IRD proximal to Scotland demonstrates widespread and rapid dispersal of debris across the subpolar North Atlantic during the Older Dryas cold oscillation, and implicates the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation as a control. This highlights the sensitivity of some IRD records to rapid climate change during the last deglaciation and supports the interpretation of Heinrich events as time-parallel marker horizons. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications Geology 41 2 155 158
spellingShingle GB Physical geography
QE Geology
Small, D.
Parrish, R.
Austin, W.
Cawood, P.
Rinterknecht, V.
Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology
title Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology
title_full Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology
title_fullStr Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology
title_full_unstemmed Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology
title_short Provenance of North Atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—A new application of U-Pb rutile and zircon geochronology
title_sort provenance of north atlantic ice-rafted debris during the last deglaciation—a new application of u-pb rutile and zircon geochronology
topic GB Physical geography
QE Geology
topic_facet GB Physical geography
QE Geology
url https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/86504/