Repository logo
 

Submarine glacial-landform distribution along an Antarctic Peninsula palaeo-ice stream: A shelf-slope transect through the Marguerite Trough system (66-70° S)

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Livingstone, SJ 
Cofaigh, C 
Hogan, KA 
Dowdeswell, JA 

Abstract

The Antarctic Peninsula comprises a thin spine of mountains and islands presently covered by an ice sheet up to 500 m thick that drains eastwards and westwards via outlet glaciers (Davies et al. 2012). Recently, the Peninsula has undergone rapid warming, resulting in the collapse of fringing ice shelves and the retreat, thinning and acceleration of marine-terminating outlet glaciers (e.g. Pritchard & Vaughan 2007). At the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the ice sheet expanded to the continental-shelf break around the Peninsula, and was organised into a series of ice streams that drained along cross-shelf bathymetric troughs (Ó Cofaigh et al. 2014). Marguerite Bay is located on the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula, at about 66° to 70° S (Fig. 1). A 12–80 km wide and 370 km long trough extends across the bay from the northern terminus of George VI Ice Shelf to the continental shelf edge. Extensive marine-geophysical surveys of the trough reveal a suite of glacial landforms which record past flow of an ice stream, which extended to the shelf edge at, or shortly after, the LGM. Subsequent retreat of the ice stream was underway by ~14 kyr ago and proceeded rapidly to the mid-shelf, where it slowed before accelerating once again to the inner shelf at ~9 kyr (Kilfeather et al. 2011).

Description

Keywords

3709 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience, 31 Biological Sciences, 3103 Ecology, 37 Earth Sciences, 3702 Climate Change Science

Journal Title

Geological Society Memoir

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0435-4052
2041-4722

Volume Title

46

Publisher

Geological Society of London