Late Cenozoic behaviour of two Transantarctic Mountain outlet glaciers

Earth’s climate is undergoing dramatic warming that is unprecedented in at least the last ~2000 years. Outlets of the Antarctic ice sheet are experiencing dynamic thinning, terminus retreat and mass loss, however, we are currently unable to accurately predict their future response. The drivers and m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jones, Richard
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17143190.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Late_Cenozoic_behaviour_of_two_Transantarctic_Mountain_outlet_glaciers/17143190
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Summary:Earth’s climate is undergoing dramatic warming that is unprecedented in at least the last ~2000 years. Outlets of the Antarctic ice sheet are experiencing dynamic thinning, terminus retreat and mass loss, however, we are currently unable to accurately predict their future response. The drivers and mechanisms responsible for these observed changes can be better understood by studying the behaviour of outlet glaciers in the geological past. Here, I use cosmogenic nuclide surface-exposure dating and numerical glacier modelling to investigate the past configurations and dynamics of Transantarctic Mountain outlet glaciers, in the Ross Sea sector of Antarctica. Numerical modelling was first applied to understand the present-day and past behaviour of Skelton Glacier. A suite of sensitivity experiments reveal that Skelton Glacier is most susceptible to atmospheric temperature through its affect on basal sliding near the groundingline. Under past climates, large changes occurred in the lower reaches of the glacier, with basal sliding and bedrock erosion predicted in the overdeepened basins during both the Pliocene and Quaternary. Skelton Glacier was likely much shorter and thinner during Pliocene interglacials, with warm-based sliding that extended along most of its length. Informed by the glacier modelling, I applied surface-exposure dating to constrain past fluctuations in the geometry of Skelton Glacier. The lower reaches of the glacier were likely thicker at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), supporting the idea of buttressing by grounded ice in the Ross Sea during glacial periods. The glacier then thinned to near-modern surface elevations by ~5.8 ka before present (BP). Multiple isotope analysis (²⁶Al-¹⁰Be) and exposure-burial modelling indicates that Skelton Glacier has fluctuated between interglacial and glacial configurations probably at orbital frequencies since the Miocene. These data record a total of >10 Ma of exposure and 2.5 Ma of burial. An unexpected outcome is that the average cosmogenic production rate ...