62 research outputs found

    Subglacial Water Flow Over an Antarctic Palaeo‐Ice Stream Bed

    Get PDF
    The subglacial hydrological system exerts a critical control on the dynamic behavior of the overlying ice because its configuration affects the degree of basal lubrication between the ice and the bed. Yet, this component of the glaciological system is notoriously hard to access and observe, particularly over timescales longer than the satellite era. In Antarctica, abundant evidence for past subglacial water flow over former ice-sheet beds exists around the peripheries of the ice sheet including networks of huge channels carved into bedrock (now submarine) on the Pacific margin of West Antarctica. Here, we combine detailed bathymetric investigations of a channel system in Marguerite Trough, a major palaeo-ice stream bed, with numerical hydrological modeling to explore subglacial water accumulation, routing and potential for erosion over decadal-centennial timescales. Detailed channel morphologies from remotely operated vehicle surveys indicate multiple stages of localized incision, and the occurrence of potholes, some gigantic in scale, suggests incision by turbulent water carrying a significant bedload. Further, the modeling indicates that subglacial water is available during deglaciation and was likely released in episodic drainage events, from subglacial lakes, varying in magnitude over time. Our observations support previous assertions that these huge bedrock channel systems were incised over multiple glacial cycles through episodic subglacial lake drainage events; however, here we present a viable pattern for subglacial drainage at times when the ice sheet existed over the continental shelf and was capable of continuing to erode the bedrock substrate

    Mapping submarine glacial landforms using acoustic methods

    Get PDF
    The mapping of submarine glacial landforms is largely dependent on marine geophysical survey methods capable of imaging the seafloor and sub-bottom through the water column. Full global coverage of seafloor mapping, equivalent to that which exists for the Earth's land surface, has, to date, only been achieved by deriving bathymetry from radar altimeters on satellites such as GeoSat and ERS-1 (Smith & Sandwell 1997). The horizontal resolution is limited by the footprint of the satellite sensors and the need to average out local wave and wind effects, resulting in a cell size of about 15 km (Sandwell et al. 2001). A further problem in high latitudes is that the altimeter data are extensively contaminated by the presence of sea ice, which degrades the derived bathymetry (McAdoo & Laxon 1997). Consequently, the satellite altimeter method alone is not suitable for mapping submarine glacial landforms, given that their morphological characterization usually requires a much finer level of detail. Acoustic mapping methods based on marine echo-sounding principles are currently the most widely used techniques for mapping submarine glacial landforms because they are capable of mapping at a much higher resolution

    Drake-Scotia Sea gateways: onset and evolution of the Drake Passage and Scotia Sea, implications for global ocean circulation and climate

    Get PDF
    Australasian IODP Regional Planing Workshop (2017. Sidney)Instituto Geológico y Minero de España, EspañaInstituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, EspañaIstituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale, ItaliaSan Diego State University, Estados UnidosPeer reviewe

    Sedimentary Signatures of Persistent Subglacial Meltwater Drainage From Thwaites Glacier, Antarctica

    Get PDF
    Subglacial meltwater drainage can enhance localized melting along grounding zones and beneath the ice shelves of marine-terminating glaciers. Efforts to constrain the evolution of subglacial hydrology and the resulting influence on ice stability in space and on decadal to millennial timescales are lacking. Here, we apply sedimentological, geochemical, and statistical methods to analyze sediment cores recovered offshore Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica to reconstruct meltwater drainage activity through the pre-satellite era. We find evidence for a long-lived subglacial hydrologic system beneath Thwaites Glacier and indications that meltwater plumes are the primary mechanism of sedimentation seaward of the glacier today. Detailed core stratigraphy revealed through computed tomography scanning captures variability in drainage styles and suggests greater magnitudes of sediment-laden meltwater have been delivered to the ocean in recent centuries compared to the past several thousand years. Fundamental similarities between meltwater plume deposits offshore Thwaites Glacier and those described in association with other Antarctic glacial systems imply widespread and similar subglacial hydrologic processes that occur independently of subglacial geology. In the context of Holocene changes to the Thwaites Glacier margin, it is likely that subglacial drainage enhanced submarine melt along the grounding zone and amplified ice-shelf melt driven by oceanic processes, consistent with observations of other West Antarctic glaciers today. This study highlights the necessity of accounting for the influence of subglacial hydrology on grounding-zone and ice-shelf melt in projections of future behavior of the Thwaites Glacier ice margin and marine-based glaciers around the Antarctic continent

    Onset and development of the Drake Passage and Scotia Sea gateways and its influence on global ocean circulation and climate (IODP proposal)

    Get PDF
    The DRAKE-SCOTIA SEA GATEWAYS is a new multidisciplinary International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) drilling proposal aimed at determining the time of opening and pattern of development of gateways in the Drake Passage and the adjacent Scotia Sea, and their influence on global ocean circulation, biotic evolution and climate. The Drake Passage with the adjacent Scotia Sea represent one of Earth’s most important oceanic gateways, between the southern tip of South America and the Antarctic Peninsula, a crucial area for water mass exchange between the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean and the Weddell Sea, the importance of which is evidence by in many multinational studies. Nevertheless, the region has not been yet drilled for scientific purposes. The objective of this work is to present the main scientific goals of this drilling proposal and its link with the IODP Science Plan for 2013-2023.Department of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway University, Reino UnidoBritish Antarctic Survey, Reino UnidoDepartment og Geology and Geophysics, Yale University, Estados UnidosGeophysical Department, Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, DinamarcaAlfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz for Polar and Marine Research, AlemaniaInstituto Geológico y Minero de España, EspañaOcean and Earth Science, University of Southampton, Reino UnidoUniversity Texas at Austin, Estados UnidosInstitute of Petroleum Engineering, Heriot-Watt University, Reino UnidoInstituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, EspañaInstituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad de Granada, EspañaCollege of Earth, Ocean and the Environment, University of Delaware, Estados UnidosUniversity New South Wales, AustraliaUniversity Nebraska-Lincoln, Estados UnidosUniversidad de Buenos Aires, Argentin

    Bathymetry and geological setting of the Drake Passage (Antarctica)

    Get PDF
    IX Congreso Geológico de España, Huelva, Septiembre 2016The Drake Passage is an oceanic gateway of about 850 km width located between South America and the Antarctic Peninsula that connects the southeastern Pacific and the southwestern Atlantic oceans and is an important gateway for mantle flow, oceanographic water masses, and migrations of biota. This gateway developed within the framework of geological evolution of the Scotia Arc. As a consequence of this and subsequent submarine processes, this region shows a varied physiography. The new detailed map in the Drake Passage region is mainly founded on a compilation of precise multibeam bathymetric data obtained on cruises between 1992 and 2014, and covers the area between parallels 52ºS and 63ºS and meridians 70ºW and 50ºW. The new map that we present is based in a DTM with 200 m cell resolution of the seafloor in Drake Passage that permits identification of the main seafloor features and the map includes additional useful geological information. This work constitutes an international cooperative effort and is part of IBCSO project (International Bathymetric Chart of the Southern Ocean), under the SCAR umbrella.Instituto Geológico y Minero de España, EspañaBritish Antarctic Survey, Reino UnidoDepartamento de Geodinámica, Universidad de Granada, EspañaInstituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, EspañaInstituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad de Granada, EspañaJet Propulsion Laboratory M/S 300-323, Estados UnidosAlfred Wegener Institute, AlemaniaKorea Polar Research Institute, CoreaDepartamento de Geología y Geoquímica, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, EspañaLamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Estados Unido

    New insights from multi-proxy data from the West Antarctic continental rise: Implications for dating and interpreting Late Quaternary palaeoenvironmental records

    Get PDF
    The Antarctic Peninsula’s Pacific margin is one of the best studied sectors of the Antarctic continental margin. Since the 1990s, several research cruises have targeted the continental rise with geophysical surveys, conventional coring and deep-sea drilling. The previous studies highlighted the potential of large sediment drifts on the rise as high-resolution palaeoenvironmental archives. However, these studies also suffered from chronological difficulties arising from the lack of calcareous microfossils, with initial results from geomagnetic relative palaeointensity (RPI) dating promising a possible solution. This paper presents data from new sediment cores recovered on cruise JR298 from seven continental rise sites west of the Antarctic Peninsula and in the Bellingshausen Sea with the objectives to (i) seek calcareous foraminifera, especially at shallow drift sites, to constrain RPI-based age models, and (ii) investigate the depositional history at these locations. We present the results of chronological and multi-proxy analyses on these cores and two cores previously collected from the study area. We establish new age models for the JR298 records and compare them with published RPI-based age models. In addition, we evaluate the reliability of different palaeoproductivity proxies and infer depositional processes. Planktic foraminifera are present in various core intervals. Although their stable oxygen isotope (δ18O) ratios, tephrochronological constraints and glacial-interglacial changes in sediment composition provide age models largely consistent with the RPI chronologies, we also observe distinct differences, predominantly in the Bellingshausen Sea cores. Enrichments of solid-phase manganese together with evidence for “burn-down” of organic carbon in late glacial and peak interglacial sediments document non-steady-state diagenesis that may have altered magnetic mineralogy and, thus, RPI proxies. This process may explain discrepancies between RPI-based age models and those derived from δ18O data combined with tephrochronology. The data also indicate that organic carbon is a much less reliable productivity proxy than biogenic barium or organically-associated bromine in the investigated sediments. In agreement with previous studies, sediment facies indicate a strong control of deposition on the rise by bottom currents that interacted with detritus supplied by meltwater plumes, gravitational down-slope transport processes and pelagic settling of iceberg-rafted debris (IRD) and planktic microfossils. Bottom-current velocities underwent only minor changes over glacial-interglacial cycles at the drift crests, with down-slope deposition only rarely affecting these shallow locations. Maximum concentrations of coarse IRD at the seafloor surfaces of the shallow sites result predominantly from upward pumping caused by extensive bioturbation. This process has to be taken into account when past changes in IRD deposition are inferred from quantifying clasts >1 mm in size

    A community-based geological reconstruction of Antarctic Ice Sheet deglaciation since the Last Glacial Maximum

    Get PDF
    A robust understanding of Antarctic Ice Sheet deglacial history since the Last Glacial Maximum is important in order to constrain ice sheet and glacial-isostatic adjustment models, and to explore the forcing mechanisms responsible for ice sheet retreat. Such understanding can be derived from a broad range of geological and glaciological datasets and recent decades have seen an upsurge in such data gathering around the continent and Sub-Antarctic islands. Here, we report a new synthesis of those datasets, based on an accompanying series of reviews of the geological data, organised by sector. We present a series of timeslice maps for 20 ka, 15 ka, 10 ka and 5 ka, including grounding line position and ice sheet thickness changes, along with a clear assessment of levels of confidence. The reconstruction shows that the Antarctic Ice sheet did not everywhere reach the continental shelf edge at its maximum, that initial retreat was asynchronous, and that the spatial pattern of deglaciation was highly variable, particularly on the inner shelf. The deglacial reconstruction is consistent with a moderate overall excess ice volume and with a relatively small Antarctic contribution to meltwater pulse 1a. We discuss key areas of uncertainty both around the continent and by time interval, and we highlight potential priorities for future work. The synthesis is intended to be a resource for the modelling and glacial geological community

    Ice sheet–free West Antarctica during peak early Oligocene glaciation

    Get PDF
    One of Earth’s most fundamental climate shifts – the greenhouse-icehouse transition 34 Ma ago – initiated Antarctic ice-sheet build-up, influencing global climate until today. However, the extent of the ice sheet during the Early Oligocene Glacial Maximum (~33.7–33.2 Ma) that immediately followed this transition, a critical knowledge gap for assessing feedbacks between permanently glaciated areas and early Cenozoic global climate reorganization, is uncertain. Here, we present shallow-marine drilling data constraining earliest Oligocene environmental conditions on West Antarctica’s Pacific margin – a key region for understanding Antarctic ice sheet-evolution. These data indicate a cool-temperate environment, with mild ocean and air temperatures preventing West Antarctic Ice Sheet formation. Climate-ice sheet modeling corroborates a highly asymmetric Antarctic ice sheet, thereby revealing its differential regional response to past and future climatic change
    corecore