Constraints on the Timing and Extent of Deglacial Grounding Line Retreat in West Antarctica

Author:

Venturelli Ryan A.1ORCID,Boehman Brenna2ORCID,Davis Christina3,Hawkings Jon R.4ORCID,Johnston Sarah E.5,Gustafson Chloe D.6ORCID,Michaud Alexander B.7ORCID,Mosbeux Cyrille6,Siegfried Matthew R.1ORCID,Vick‐Majors Trista J.8ORCID,Galy Valier2ORCID,Spencer Robert G. M.9ORCID,Warny Sophie10,Christner Brent C.3,Fricker Helen A.6ORCID,Harwood David M.11ORCID,Leventer Amy12ORCID,Priscu John C.13ORCID,Rosenheim Brad E.14ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Colorado School of Mines Golden CO USA

2. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole MA USA

3. University of Florida Gainesville FL USA

4. University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA USA

5. University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks AK USA

6. Scripps Institution of Oceanography La Jolla CA USA

7. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences East Boothbay ME USA

8. Michigan Technological University Houghton MI USA

9. Florida State University Tallahassee FL USA

10. Louisiana State University Baton Rouge LA USA

11. University of Nebraska‐Lincoln Lincoln NE USA

12. Colgate University Hamilton NY USA

13. Polar Oceans Research Group Sheridan MT USA

14. College of Marine Science University of South Florida St. Petersburg FL USA

Abstract

AbstractProjections of Antarctica's contribution to future sea level rise are associated with significant uncertainty, in part because the observational record is too short to capture long‐term processes necessary to estimate ice mass changes over societally relevant timescales. Records of grounding line retreat from the geologic past offer an opportunity to extend our observations of these processes beyond the modern record and to gain a more comprehensive understanding of ice‐sheet change. Here, we present constraints on the timing and inland extent of deglacial grounding line retreat in the southern Ross Sea, Antarctica, obtained via direct sampling of a subglacial lake located 150 km inland from the modern grounding line and beneath >1 km of ice. Isotopic measurements of water and sediment from the lake enabled us to evaluate how the subglacial microbial community accessed radiocarbon‐bearing organic carbon for energy, as well as where it transferred carbon metabolically. Using radiocarbon as a natural tracer, we found that sedimentary organic carbon was microbially translocated to dissolved carbon pools in the subglacial hydrologic system during the 4.5‐year period of water accumulation prior to our sampling. This finding indicates that the grounding line along the Siple Coast of West Antarctica retreated more than 250 km inland during the mid‐Holocene (6.3 ± 1.0 ka), prior to re‐advancing to its modern position.

Funder

National Science Foundation

HORIZON EUROPE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Reference106 articles.

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

3. Ice-Shelf Flow at the Boundary of Crary Ice Rise, Antarctica

4. The WAIS Divide deep ice core WD2014 chronology – Part 1: Methane synchronization (68–31 ka BP) and the gas age–ice age difference

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