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  • 1
    Call number: MOP Per 877(17)
    In: World Climate Applications Programme
    In: WMO TD
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 28 S.
    Series Statement: World Climate Applications Programme 17
    Location: MOP - must be ordered
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2000-05-19
    Print ISSN: 0031-9155
    Electronic ISSN: 1361-6560
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Physics
    Published by Institute of Physics
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  • 3
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    COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
    In:  EPIC3Cryosphere, COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH, 14, pp. 2115-2135, ISSN: 1994-0416
    Publication Date: 2020-12-13
    Description: The Antarctic Ice Sheet extent in the Weddell Sea Embayment (WSE) during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; ca. 19-25 calibrated kiloyears before present, cal. ka BP) and its subsequent retreat from the shelf are poorly constrained, with two conflicting scenarios being discussed. Today, the modern Brunt Ice Shelf, the last remaining ice shelf in the northeastern WSE, is only pinned at a single location and recent crevasse development may lead to its rapid disintegration in the near future. We investigated the seafloor morphology on the northeastern WSE shelf and discuss its implications, in combination with marine geological records, for reconstructions of the past behaviour of this sector of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS), including ice-seafloor interactions. Our data show that an ice stream flowed through Stancomb-Wills Trough and acted as the main conduit for EAIS drainage during the LGM. Post-LGM ice-stream retreat occurred stepwise, with at least three documented grounding line still stands, and the trough had become free of grounded ice by ~10.5 cal. ka BP. In contrast, slow-flowing ice once covered the shelf in Brunt Basin and extended westwards toward McDonald Bank. During a later time period, only floating ice was present within Brunt Basin, but large ‘ice slabs’ enclosed within the ice shelf occasionally ran aground at the eastern side of McDonald Bank, forming ten unusual ramp-shaped seabed features. These ramps are the result of temporary ice-shelf grounding events buttressing the ice further upstream. To the west of this area, Halley Trough very likely was free of grounded ice during the LGM, representing a potential refuge for benthic shelf fauna at this time.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-12-13
    Description: Past ice dynamics are so far only poorly resolved in the southern Weddell Sea. This is highlighted by previous studies that led to two contradicting scenarios for the grounding line location during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), which differed by up to ~650 km. Another study suggested that the maximum ice extent locally was not reached during the LGM but in the early Holocene, indicating that there was also a highly dynamic ice sheet system during deglaciation. There is ambiguity about the history of ice advance and retreat in the region offshore Brunt Ice Shelf based on current data. Only one radiocarbon dated marine geological core is available, contains age reversals, and can be interpreted as indicating ice free conditions during the LGM or having been overrun by grounded ice between 30.2-20.3 cal ka BP. Today, the Brunt Ice Shelf itself is a focus of interest due to the critical crack/fracture development since 2016. This endangers Halley research station, which is situated on the ice shelf, and has resulted in the third consecutive year of austral winter closure. Geophysical ice shelf investigations revealed that, unlike usual ice shelves, the Brunt Ice Shelf consists of numerous blocks of meteoric/glacial ice that are “glued” together by freezing sea ice and snow drift. It is hypothesized that the Brunt Ice Shelf sustains its stability due to buttressing at the McDonald Ice Rumples, which form the only remaining ice shelf pinning point. Improved understanding of the past development of the ice shelf system may also aid understanding the processes active today. We investigated hydroacoustic data that were acquired offshore Brunt Ice Shelf over the last decades with RV Polarstern and RRS James Clark Ross for geomorphological indications of past ice sheet dynamics. The identified landforms show that major ice discharge during the LGM was not via Brunt Basin just in front of the modern-day Brunt Ice Shelf, but via an ice stream that occupied Stancomb-Wills Trough, which is located northeast of Brunt Ice Shelf and extends about 200 km upstream of the modern-day grounding line. We identified at least three still stand phases during retreat in this trough. Marine geological data revealed a minimum age for grounding line retreat before 8.5 cal ka BP. In contrast, we found no indications of fast flowing ice in Brunt Basin. Instead, we infer slow flowing, cold-based ice and found uniquely formed ramp-shaped bedforms. We suggest that these ramps were formed due to the unusual structure of the ice shelf, which led to temporary grounding of ice shelf keels that acted as buttressing points for a more extensive ice shelf in the past. We will present the new ice sheet reconstruction and will discuss the formation process of the ramps.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The glacial history of the Antarctic Ice Sheet in the Weddell Sea embayment during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 23-19 ka) is a matter of debate. Existing onshore and offshore data suggest two alternative reconstructions for the LGM ice sheet extent. One scenario shows an ice sheet grounding line that had advanced to (or at least close to) the shelf edge throughout the Weddell Sea, embayment. The other reconstruction concludes that the grounding line in the two main cross shelf troughs was located only slightly farther offshore than today. Here we present new data from multibeam swath bathymetry surveys, acoustic sub-bottom profiles and sediment cores collected during recent and past British and German marine expeditions. These data provide new constraints on the glacial history of the eastern part of the Weddell Sea embayment. A previously unknown, stacked grounding zone wedge discovered in the outer shelf part of Filchner Trough possibly marks the northernmost position of the LGM grounding line within this palaeo-ice stream trough. Crescentic moraines and a predominantly smooth seabed morphology mapped north of the Brunt Ice Shelf reveal a complex glacial history with repeated advances of grounded ice or episodic retreats, controlled by a hard seafloor substrate. We will compare new radiocarbon dates obtained from the sediment cores to existing chronologies and use them to reconstruct the timing of the last maximum ice sheet advance and post-LGM retreat. Finally, we will set our new findings into context with results from ice sheet models and discuss their implications for Antarctica's contribution to global meltwater pulses during the last deglaciation.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The Amundsen Sea sector of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) is experiencing rapid mass loss and there is a pressing need to place the contemporary ice-sheet changes into a longer term context. The continental rise in this region is characterised by large sediment mounds that are shaped by westward flowing bottom currents and that resemble contouritic drifts existing offshore from the Antarctic Peninsula. Similar to the Antarctic Peninsula drifts, marine sediment cores from the poorly studied sediment mounds in the Amundsen Sea have the potential to provide reliable records of dynamical ice-sheet behaviour in West Antarctica and palaeoceanographic changes in the Southern Ocean during the Late Quaternary that can be reconstructed from their terrestrial, biogenic and authigenic components. Here we use multi-proxy data from three sediment cores recovered from two of the Amundsen Sea mounds to present the first high-resolution study of environmental changes on this part of the West Antarctic continental margin over the glacial-interglacial cycles of the Late Quaternary. Age constraints for the records are derived from biostratigraphy, AMS 14C dates and lithostratigraphy. We focus on the investigation of processes for drift formation, thereby using grain size and sortable silt data to reconstruct changes in bottom current speed and to identify episodes of current winnowing. Data on geochemical and mineralogical sediment composition and physical properties are used to infer both changes in terrigenous sediment supply in response to the advance and retreat of the WAIS across the Amundsen Sea shelf and changes in biological productivity that are mainly controlled by the duration of annual sea-ice coverage. We compare our data sets from the Amundsen Sea mounds to those from the well-studied Antarctic Peninsula drifts, thereby highlighting similarities and discrepancies in depositional processes and climatically-driven environmental changes.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 8
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    In:  EPIC3Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium of Antarctic Earth Sciences, U.S. Geological Survey and The National Academies Open File Report, extended abstract.
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The threat, in terms of sea level rise, posed by the potential rapid deglaciation of West Antarctica means there is an urgent need to know more about the speed and style of marine ice sheet retreat. Quaternary deglacial events recorded in marine sediments provide an opportunity to understand the future of the modern day ice sheet. In this context, we examine the glacial history of a particularly poorly understood sector of the West Antarctic continental shelf the Amundsen Sea Embayment using new data from two recent research cruises. This extended abstract describes how marine geological and geophysical data are being used alongside terrestrial dating methods to understand the full extents, dynamics and retreat pattern of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet in the Amundsen Sea region during the last glacial cycle. These data hold significance for understanding and accurately modelling the stability and climate sensitivity of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: Marine geoscience data indicate that during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) grounded ice extended to the shelf edge along most, if not all, of the 2500 km-long continental margin from the northern Antarctic Peninsula to the Amundsen Sea. Past extent of grounded ice is indicated by swath bathymetry data from the outer parts of cross-shelf troughs, which reveal relict elongated subglacial bedforms. The bedforms show that the troughs were paths of fast-flowing (streaming) ice. Geomorphological evidence regarding the nature of ice flow over intervening outer shelf banks has been erased through pervasive post-glacial ploughing by icebergs. However, seismic profiles across the banks reveal widespread shelf edge progradation and numerous glacial unconformities that indicate grounded ice has extended across them many times during the Pleistocene, and before. Subglacial tills in the outer parts of shelf troughs are overlain by up to 2 m of postglacial sediments, which are no older than the LGM in any core yet dated. A layer of soft, intermediate shear strength (12¬25 kPa) till, interpreted as deformation till, underlies the postglacial sediments in cores in the troughs. These observations are consistent with the interpretation that streaming ice extended along the troughs during the LGM, but the duration of such flow, and whether or not it spanned the entire period when ice extended to the outer shelf remains undetermined.To determine when, and how rapidly, ice retreated from the continental shelf, ages of core samples from near the base of postglacial sediments in several troughs have been determined by AMS radiocarbon dating. Samples to constrain glacial retreat have been taken from either the base of muds deposited in seasonally open-marine conditions similar to today, or underlying sandy muds interpreted as having been deposited close to the grounding line. Modern sea-floor sediments on some parts of the margin contain sufficient calcareous microfossils for dating to constrain the local marine 14C reservoir correction. However, even where they occur, contents of planktonic foraminifera decrease downcore, and most deglaciation ages have been obtained from acid insoluble organic material (AIOM). In some areas these ages are significantly affected by reworked fossil carbon, as shown by apparent ages from AIOM in modern sea-floor sediments that range up to ~6000 years. Thus radiocarbon results from this margin must be treated with caution and there is a clear need for development of alternative dating methods.Notwithstanding these uncertainties, deglaciation ages obtained thus far suggest variable retreat histories along the margin. Results from the Antarctic Peninsula shelf and Amundsen Sea embayment suggest relatively rapid post-LGM ice retreat from the outer and middle shelf, followed by slower Holocene retreat to the present day ice margin. However, initial results from the Bellingshausen Sea (Belgica Trough) suggest a slower, progressive retreat commencing about 25 ka (corrected radiocarbon years). These results show that local factors are important in controlling the rate of ice retreat, and this needs to be taken into account in numerical models that attempt to predict the dynamic behaviour of large ice sheets.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The Amundsen Sea sector of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) is the most rapidly changing part of the Antarctic ice sheet and could have a significant impact on future sea level rise. However, sea level rise predictions in the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Summary for Policymakers excluded the possible effects of future rapid dynamic changes in ice flow because ice sheet model predictions were not considered to be sufficiently reliable.One approach to testing and refining ice sheet models would be to examine their ability to reproduce ice sheet changes since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Records of ice margin retreat and ice surface elevation change since the LGM also provide a context for recent changes. Until recently, however, knowledge of the chronology of change in the Amundsen Sea sector of WAIS since the LGM has been based on just seven radiocarbon dates from continental shelf sediment cores collected in 1999 on RV Nathaniel B. Palmer1. These dates indicated that there was already seasonally open water over the middle part of the shelf by 15,800 +/- 3900 radiocarbon years ago, and open water extended to within 100 km of the modern ice margin in Pine Island Bay before 10,150 +/- 370 radiocarbon years ago. Over the past 18 months we have obtained 34 new AMS radiocarbon dates on samples from 25 Amundsen Sea shelf sediment cores collected during research cruises in early 2006 on RRS James Clark Ross and RV Polarstern. Some dates are on carbonate (foraminifera) but most are on the acid insoluble organic fraction. Several dates are on modern surface sediment samples to evaluate the marine reservoir correction and the effect of reworked fossil carbon. We have also obtained the first surface exposure ages from the region by analysing cosmogenic isotopes in samples collected from sites accessed using helicopters operating from RV Polarstern. These ages provide the first data on long-term changes in surface elevation of ice in the Amundsen Sea sector of the WAIS.Our new radiocarbon dates, together with swath bathymetry data collected on the same cruises and some previous cruises2, confirm that the ice grounding line advanced to the continental shelf edge in the Amundsen Sea at the LGM. The retreat of the ice margin to its present position represents a loss of more than 150,000 km2 of ice sheet, i.e. more than 35% of the area that remains in the Amundsen Sea sector of the WAIS. Our new data are generally consistent with the timing of ice margin retreat suggested previously, and in the western part of the embayment most of the retreat to the present ice margin position was certainly complete by early Holocene time. Average rates of retreat and surface elevation change are more than an order of magnitude slower than those observed over recent decades, but we cannot discount the possibility that there might have been previous short-lived episodes of rapid change since the LGM.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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