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Long-term record of Barents Sea Ice Sheet advance to the shelf edge from a 140,000 year record

Long-term record of Barents Sea Ice Sheet advance to the shelf edge from a 140,000 year record
Long-term record of Barents Sea Ice Sheet advance to the shelf edge from a 140,000 year record
The full-glacial extent and deglacial behaviour of marine-based ice sheets, such as the Barents Sea Ice Sheet, is well documented since the Last Glacial Maximum about 20,000 years ago. However, reworking of older sea-floor sediments and landforms during repeated Quaternary advances across the shelf typically obscures their longer-term behaviour, which hampers our understanding. Here, we provide the first detailed long-term record of Barents Sea Ice Sheet advances, using the timing of debris-flows on the Bear Island Trough-Mouth Fan. Ice advanced to the shelf edge during four distinct periods over the last 140,000 years. By far the largest sediment volumes were delivered during the oldest advance more than 128,000 years ago. Later advances occurred from 68,000 to 60,000, 39,400 to 36,000 and 26,000 to 20,900 years before present. The debris-flows indicate that the dynamics of the Saalian and the Weichselian Barents Sea Ice Sheet were very different. The repeated ice advance and retreat cycles during the Weichselian were shorter lived than those seen in the Saalian. Sediment composition shows the configuration of the ice sheet was also different between the two glacial periods, implying that the ice feeding the Bear Island Ice stream came predominantly from Scandinavia during the Saalian, whilst it drained more ice from east of Svalbard during the Weichselian.
Glacigenic debris-flows, Ice sheet, Ice stream, Trough-Mouth Fan, Weichselian, Barents Sea Ice Sheet, Sedimentary records
0277-3791
55-66
Pope, Ed L.
2043c317-9ba0-4cbb-a47f-a36f9020417e
Talling, Peter J.
1cbac5ec-a9f8-4868-94fe-6203f30b47cf
Hunt, James E.
eb7fbfb5-b1c9-4436-b7f6-18c8d13b7a0b
Dowdeswell, Julian A.
106dce8d-e831-4407-b65d-575452be2cb8
Allin, Joshua R.
360b2637-6755-44fd-87ff-0e1eb4759c22
Cartigny, Matthieu J.B.
d252d7b1-16c6-47b1-bf86-8087070934ce
Long, David
40d62863-d9b2-4bcb-8e90-0152c22c636a
Mozzato, Alessandro
8187908f-28cf-44a0-a10d-28e32ef70a32
Stanford, Jennifer D.
ae1ee9c4-04b4-4a52-88a4-94c1f591cede
Tappin, David R.
86123fe5-a866-4bf0-a098-2cc5184f36be
Watts, Millie
74f8c79a-1eee-4337-ae9e-a2681933ecbe
Pope, Ed L.
2043c317-9ba0-4cbb-a47f-a36f9020417e
Talling, Peter J.
1cbac5ec-a9f8-4868-94fe-6203f30b47cf
Hunt, James E.
eb7fbfb5-b1c9-4436-b7f6-18c8d13b7a0b
Dowdeswell, Julian A.
106dce8d-e831-4407-b65d-575452be2cb8
Allin, Joshua R.
360b2637-6755-44fd-87ff-0e1eb4759c22
Cartigny, Matthieu J.B.
d252d7b1-16c6-47b1-bf86-8087070934ce
Long, David
40d62863-d9b2-4bcb-8e90-0152c22c636a
Mozzato, Alessandro
8187908f-28cf-44a0-a10d-28e32ef70a32
Stanford, Jennifer D.
ae1ee9c4-04b4-4a52-88a4-94c1f591cede
Tappin, David R.
86123fe5-a866-4bf0-a098-2cc5184f36be
Watts, Millie
74f8c79a-1eee-4337-ae9e-a2681933ecbe

Pope, Ed L., Talling, Peter J., Hunt, James E., Dowdeswell, Julian A., Allin, Joshua R., Cartigny, Matthieu J.B., Long, David, Mozzato, Alessandro, Stanford, Jennifer D., Tappin, David R. and Watts, Millie (2016) Long-term record of Barents Sea Ice Sheet advance to the shelf edge from a 140,000 year record. Quaternary Science Reviews, 150, 55-66. (doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.08.014).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The full-glacial extent and deglacial behaviour of marine-based ice sheets, such as the Barents Sea Ice Sheet, is well documented since the Last Glacial Maximum about 20,000 years ago. However, reworking of older sea-floor sediments and landforms during repeated Quaternary advances across the shelf typically obscures their longer-term behaviour, which hampers our understanding. Here, we provide the first detailed long-term record of Barents Sea Ice Sheet advances, using the timing of debris-flows on the Bear Island Trough-Mouth Fan. Ice advanced to the shelf edge during four distinct periods over the last 140,000 years. By far the largest sediment volumes were delivered during the oldest advance more than 128,000 years ago. Later advances occurred from 68,000 to 60,000, 39,400 to 36,000 and 26,000 to 20,900 years before present. The debris-flows indicate that the dynamics of the Saalian and the Weichselian Barents Sea Ice Sheet were very different. The repeated ice advance and retreat cycles during the Weichselian were shorter lived than those seen in the Saalian. Sediment composition shows the configuration of the ice sheet was also different between the two glacial periods, implying that the ice feeding the Bear Island Ice stream came predominantly from Scandinavia during the Saalian, whilst it drained more ice from east of Svalbard during the Weichselian.

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More information

Published date: 9 August 2016
Keywords: Glacigenic debris-flows, Ice sheet, Ice stream, Trough-Mouth Fan, Weichselian, Barents Sea Ice Sheet, Sedimentary records
Organisations: Marine Geoscience

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 399424
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/399424
ISSN: 0277-3791
PURE UUID: 2cf3d951-f33c-4d16-aed8-8c896d20679d
ORCID for Joshua R. Allin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4003-7495

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 15 Aug 2016 12:33
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:49

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Contributors

Author: Ed L. Pope
Author: Peter J. Talling
Author: James E. Hunt
Author: Julian A. Dowdeswell
Author: Joshua R. Allin ORCID iD
Author: Matthieu J.B. Cartigny
Author: David Long
Author: Alessandro Mozzato
Author: Jennifer D. Stanford
Author: David R. Tappin
Author: Millie Watts

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