Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

Modern beaches in McMurdo Sound can be divided into 3 process regimes. Beaches on Ross Island (eastern McMurdo Sound) are characterised by marine processes with little ice modification. On ice-bound western McMurdo Sound, coastal orientation is of paramount importance. Ice thrust features are promin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Butler, Edward R T
Other Authors: Kirk, Bob, Shulmeister, Jamie
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Victoria University of Wellington 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/711
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spelling ftvuwellington:oai:researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz:10063/711 2023-08-15T12:37:43+02:00 Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica Butler, Edward R T Kirk, Bob Shulmeister, Jamie 2001 http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/711 en_NZ eng Victoria University of Wellington http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/711 Antarctic beaches Antarctic seashore Seashore ecology Antarctic ecology Text Doctoral 2001 ftvuwellington 2023-07-25T17:22:35Z Modern beaches in McMurdo Sound can be divided into 3 process regimes. Beaches on Ross Island (eastern McMurdo Sound) are characterised by marine processes with little ice modification. On ice-bound western McMurdo Sound, coastal orientation is of paramount importance. Ice thrust features are prominent on south facing beaches, which are open to the predominant wind direction and receive relatively small waves from the fetch restricted south. A greater degree of marine dominance is exhibited by beaches on north facing coasts where sea ice is blown offshore and the beaches are open to the larger storm waves from the eastern Ross Sea. The single most useful indicator of the relative importance of marine and ice processes on the beaches is the roundness of the beach material. Unlike the modern beaches, raised beach ridges at all sites comprise poorly sorted cobbles in a mixed sand and gravel matrix. These are inferred to be storm ridges. In contrast with the raised beaches, the modern beaches on the western side of the Sound have evidence of ice processes on them. This suggests that the modem beach has not experienced the same magnitude storms that produced the raised beaches. The size and frequency of the ridges is a product of the local wave climate. The number of raised beaches at any site is a useful indicator of the paleo-wave climate. More ridges occur in sheltered south facing locations, because they are more protected from open marine conditions, than on beaches in ice-free or north facing locations. When determining the marine limit of a site the most useful features are, low energy marine bedding features (such as flaser bedding) and boulder pavements. Based on inferred process information at the time of deposition, revised estimates of marine limits in McMurdo Sound and a new marine limit at Cape Barne are presented. Because the nature of the raised beaches has not been fully considered by previous authors sea level curves are inaccurate. The reconstruction of the retreat of the Ross Ice Shelf from marine ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Ice Shelf McMurdo Sound Ross Ice Shelf Ross Island Ross Sea Sea ice Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive Antarctic Barne ENVELOPE(166.233,166.233,-77.583,-77.583) Cape Barne ENVELOPE(166.433,166.433,-77.600,-77.600) McMurdo Sound Raised Beach ENVELOPE(163.783,163.783,-74.983,-74.983) Ross Ice Shelf Ross Island Ross Sea The Beaches ENVELOPE(-56.832,-56.832,49.583,49.583)
institution Open Polar
collection Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive
op_collection_id ftvuwellington
language English
topic Antarctic beaches
Antarctic seashore
Seashore ecology
Antarctic ecology
spellingShingle Antarctic beaches
Antarctic seashore
Seashore ecology
Antarctic ecology
Butler, Edward R T
Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
topic_facet Antarctic beaches
Antarctic seashore
Seashore ecology
Antarctic ecology
description Modern beaches in McMurdo Sound can be divided into 3 process regimes. Beaches on Ross Island (eastern McMurdo Sound) are characterised by marine processes with little ice modification. On ice-bound western McMurdo Sound, coastal orientation is of paramount importance. Ice thrust features are prominent on south facing beaches, which are open to the predominant wind direction and receive relatively small waves from the fetch restricted south. A greater degree of marine dominance is exhibited by beaches on north facing coasts where sea ice is blown offshore and the beaches are open to the larger storm waves from the eastern Ross Sea. The single most useful indicator of the relative importance of marine and ice processes on the beaches is the roundness of the beach material. Unlike the modern beaches, raised beach ridges at all sites comprise poorly sorted cobbles in a mixed sand and gravel matrix. These are inferred to be storm ridges. In contrast with the raised beaches, the modern beaches on the western side of the Sound have evidence of ice processes on them. This suggests that the modem beach has not experienced the same magnitude storms that produced the raised beaches. The size and frequency of the ridges is a product of the local wave climate. The number of raised beaches at any site is a useful indicator of the paleo-wave climate. More ridges occur in sheltered south facing locations, because they are more protected from open marine conditions, than on beaches in ice-free or north facing locations. When determining the marine limit of a site the most useful features are, low energy marine bedding features (such as flaser bedding) and boulder pavements. Based on inferred process information at the time of deposition, revised estimates of marine limits in McMurdo Sound and a new marine limit at Cape Barne are presented. Because the nature of the raised beaches has not been fully considered by previous authors sea level curves are inaccurate. The reconstruction of the retreat of the Ross Ice Shelf from marine ...
author2 Kirk, Bob
Shulmeister, Jamie
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Butler, Edward R T
author_facet Butler, Edward R T
author_sort Butler, Edward R T
title Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_short Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_full Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_fullStr Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_sort beaches in mcmurdo sound, antarctica
publisher Victoria University of Wellington
publishDate 2001
url http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/711
long_lat ENVELOPE(166.233,166.233,-77.583,-77.583)
ENVELOPE(166.433,166.433,-77.600,-77.600)
ENVELOPE(163.783,163.783,-74.983,-74.983)
ENVELOPE(-56.832,-56.832,49.583,49.583)
geographic Antarctic
Barne
Cape Barne
McMurdo Sound
Raised Beach
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Island
Ross Sea
The Beaches
geographic_facet Antarctic
Barne
Cape Barne
McMurdo Sound
Raised Beach
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Island
Ross Sea
The Beaches
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Shelf
McMurdo Sound
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Island
Ross Sea
Sea ice
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Shelf
McMurdo Sound
Ross Ice Shelf
Ross Island
Ross Sea
Sea ice
op_relation http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/711
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