Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf

During the last glacial maximum, grounded ice from the expanded Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet extended across the continental shelf. Grounded and flowing ice carved a distinctive array of glacial geomorphic features into the seafloor, which were gradually exposed as the ice pulled back. The recent d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Campo, Jennifer 1982-
Other Authors: Wellner, Julia S., Robinson, Alexander C., Shipp, Stephanie S., Lapen, Thomas J.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1661
id ftunivhouston:oai:uh-ir.tdl.org:10657/1661
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivhouston:oai:uh-ir.tdl.org:10657/1661 2023-05-15T13:46:38+02:00 Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf Campo, Jennifer 1982- Wellner, Julia S. Robinson, Alexander C. Shipp, Stephanie S. Lapen, Thomas J. December 2014 application/pdf born digital http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1661 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1661 The author of this work is the copyright owner. UH Libraries and the Texas Digital Library have their permission to store and provide access to this work. Further transmission, reproduction, or presentation of this work is prohibited except with permission of the author(s). Glacial geomorphology Multibeam Antarctic Peninsula Thesis Text 2014 ftunivhouston 2022-04-03T15:45:52Z During the last glacial maximum, grounded ice from the expanded Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet extended across the continental shelf. Grounded and flowing ice carved a distinctive array of glacial geomorphic features into the seafloor, which were gradually exposed as the ice pulled back. The recent disintegration of the northern parts of the Larsen Ice Shelf (Larsen A and B) have permitted acquisition of marine geophysical data in previously unmapped areas. A Korea Polar Research Institute (KOPRI) cruise, completed in 2013, collected new multibeam swath bathymetry data and 3.5 kHz CHIRP sub-bottom profiles within the Larsen A and B embayments, and adjacent to the current Larsen C Ice Shelf. This new multibeam dataset has been merged with pre-existing datasets from the U.S. and British Antarctic programs to permit the mapping and interpretation of ice flow across the eastern Antarctic Peninsula shelf. CHIRP profiles were analyzed to determine shallow seafloor lithology, and to correlate with mapped geomorphic features. The evolving ice-flow path and dynamic ice sheet geometry of the eastern Antarctic Peninsula has been reconstructed, with particular focus paid to newly surveyed areas that shed light on the dynamics of a marine-terminating glacial geomorphic environment, where ice shelves play a major role in grounding line stability. I have noted three major paleo-ice streams, previously identified by several studies, to flow isochronously, with no major flow deactivations throughout ice sheet retreat. Transient flow directions were mapped across the Seal Nunataks, indicating a flow reorientation reflective of result of the changing ice sheet geometry as retreat neared the coastline. Drumlins within the eastern Antarctic Peninsula are wider and longer than in other glacial environments. Mega scale glacial lineations are noted to fall slightly above the geometric averages of width and length. These measured flow indicators reveal comparatively high elongation ratios (<20), indicating rapid ice flow. Glacial moraines are conspicuously absent in the study area. Ice sheet grounding lines since the last glacial maximum have been reconstructed from 20 to 10 ka, in time slices of 1 ka. Evidence of previous ice shelf collapses are noted near the shelf break, further illustrating the critical, protective effect that ice shelves impart to marine terminating glacial environments. Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet Ice Shelf Ice Shelves Korea Polar Research Institute Larsen Ice Shelf University of Houston Institutional Repository (UHIR) Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Larsen Ice Shelf ENVELOPE(-62.500,-62.500,-67.500,-67.500) Seal Nunataks ENVELOPE(-60.255,-60.255,-65.049,-65.049)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Houston Institutional Repository (UHIR)
op_collection_id ftunivhouston
language English
topic Glacial geomorphology
Multibeam
Antarctic Peninsula
spellingShingle Glacial geomorphology
Multibeam
Antarctic Peninsula
Campo, Jennifer 1982-
Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
topic_facet Glacial geomorphology
Multibeam
Antarctic Peninsula
description During the last glacial maximum, grounded ice from the expanded Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet extended across the continental shelf. Grounded and flowing ice carved a distinctive array of glacial geomorphic features into the seafloor, which were gradually exposed as the ice pulled back. The recent disintegration of the northern parts of the Larsen Ice Shelf (Larsen A and B) have permitted acquisition of marine geophysical data in previously unmapped areas. A Korea Polar Research Institute (KOPRI) cruise, completed in 2013, collected new multibeam swath bathymetry data and 3.5 kHz CHIRP sub-bottom profiles within the Larsen A and B embayments, and adjacent to the current Larsen C Ice Shelf. This new multibeam dataset has been merged with pre-existing datasets from the U.S. and British Antarctic programs to permit the mapping and interpretation of ice flow across the eastern Antarctic Peninsula shelf. CHIRP profiles were analyzed to determine shallow seafloor lithology, and to correlate with mapped geomorphic features. The evolving ice-flow path and dynamic ice sheet geometry of the eastern Antarctic Peninsula has been reconstructed, with particular focus paid to newly surveyed areas that shed light on the dynamics of a marine-terminating glacial geomorphic environment, where ice shelves play a major role in grounding line stability. I have noted three major paleo-ice streams, previously identified by several studies, to flow isochronously, with no major flow deactivations throughout ice sheet retreat. Transient flow directions were mapped across the Seal Nunataks, indicating a flow reorientation reflective of result of the changing ice sheet geometry as retreat neared the coastline. Drumlins within the eastern Antarctic Peninsula are wider and longer than in other glacial environments. Mega scale glacial lineations are noted to fall slightly above the geometric averages of width and length. These measured flow indicators reveal comparatively high elongation ratios (<20), indicating rapid ice flow. Glacial moraines are conspicuously absent in the study area. Ice sheet grounding lines since the last glacial maximum have been reconstructed from 20 to 10 ka, in time slices of 1 ka. Evidence of previous ice shelf collapses are noted near the shelf break, further illustrating the critical, protective effect that ice shelves impart to marine terminating glacial environments. Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of
author2 Wellner, Julia S.
Robinson, Alexander C.
Shipp, Stephanie S.
Lapen, Thomas J.
format Thesis
author Campo, Jennifer 1982-
author_facet Campo, Jennifer 1982-
author_sort Campo, Jennifer 1982-
title Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_short Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_full Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_fullStr Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_full_unstemmed Glacial Geomorphology of the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_sort glacial geomorphology of the eastern antarctic peninsula shelf
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1661
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.500,-62.500,-67.500,-67.500)
ENVELOPE(-60.255,-60.255,-65.049,-65.049)
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Larsen Ice Shelf
Seal Nunataks
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Larsen Ice Shelf
Seal Nunataks
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Korea Polar Research Institute
Larsen Ice Shelf
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Korea Polar Research Institute
Larsen Ice Shelf
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1661
op_rights The author of this work is the copyright owner. UH Libraries and the Texas Digital Library have their permission to store and provide access to this work. Further transmission, reproduction, or presentation of this work is prohibited except with permission of the author(s).
_version_ 1766244758687055872