1 research outputs found
Heinrich event 1: an example of dynamical ice-sheet reaction to oceanic changes
Heinrich events, identified as enhanced ice-rafted
detritus (IRD) in North Atlantic deep sea sediments (Heinrich,
1988; Hemming, 2004) have classically been attributed
to Laurentide ice-sheet (LIS) instabilities (MacAyeal, 1993;
Calov et al., 2002; Hulbe et al., 2004) and assumed to lead to
important disruptions of the Atlantic meridional overturning
circulation (AMOC) and North Atlantic deep water (NADW)
formation. However, recent paleoclimate data have revealed
that most of these events probably occurred after the AMOC
had already slowed down or/and NADW largely collapsed,
within about a thousand years (Hall et al., 2006; Hemming,
2004; Jonkers et al., 2010; Roche et al., 2004), implying that
the initial AMOC reduction could not have been caused by
the Heinrich events themselves.
Here we propose an alternative driving mechanism, specifically
for Heinrich event 1 (H1; 18 to 15 ka BP), by which
North Atlantic ocean circulation changes are found to have
strong impacts on LIS dynamics. By combining simulations
with a coupled climate model and a three-dimensional
ice sheet model, our study illustrates how reduced NADW
and AMOC weakening lead to a subsurface warming in the
Nordic and Labrador Seas resulting in rapid melting of the
Hudson Strait and Labrador ice shelves. Lack of buttressing
by the ice shelves implies a substantial ice-stream acceleration,
enhanced ice-discharge and sea level rise, with peak values 500–1500 yr after the initial AMOC reduction. Our
scenario modifies the previous paradigm of H1 by solving
the paradox of its occurrence during a cold surface period,
and highlights the importance of taking into account the effects
of oceanic circulation on ice-sheets dynamics in order
to elucidate the triggering mechanism of Heinrich events.Peer reviewe