Glacial history of Inglefield Land, north Greenland from combined in situ <sup>10</sup>Be and <sup>14</sup>C exposure dating
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Published:2020-10-30
Issue:5
Volume:16
Page:1999-2015
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ISSN:1814-9332
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Container-title:Climate of the Past
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Søndergaard Anne SofieORCID, Larsen Nicolaj Krog, Steinemann OliviaORCID, Olsen Jesper, Funder Svend, Egholm David Lundbek, Kjær Kurt Henrik
Abstract
Abstract. Determining the sensitivity of the Greenland Ice Sheet
(GrIS) to Holocene climate changes is a key prerequisite for understanding
the future response of the ice sheet to global warming. In this study, we
present new information on the Holocene glacial history of the GrIS in
Inglefield Land, north Greenland. We use 10Be and in situ 14C
exposure dating to constrain the timing of deglaciation in the area and
radiocarbon dating of reworked molluscs and wood fragments to constrain when
the ice sheet retreated behind its present-day extent. The 10Be ages
are scattered ranging from ca. 92.7 to 6.8 ka, whereas the in situ 14C
ages range from ca. 14.2 to 6.7 ka. Almost half of the apparent 10Be
ages predate the Last Glacial Maximum and up to 89 % are to some degree
affected by nuclide inheritance. Based on the few reliable 10Be ages,
the in situ 14C ages and existing radiocarbon ages from Inglefield
Land, we find that the deglaciation along the coast commenced at ca.
8.6–8.3 ka cal BP in the western part and ca. 7.9 ka in the central part, following
the opening of Nares Strait and arrival of warm waters. The ice margin
reached its present-day position at ca. 8.2 ka at the Humboldt Glacier and ca.
6.7 ka in the central part of Inglefield Land. Radiocarbon ages of reworked
molluscs and wood fragments show that the ice margin was behind its
present-day extent from ca. 5.8 to 0.5 ka cal BP. After 0.5 ka cal BP, the
ice advanced towards its Little Ice Age position. Our results emphasize that
the slowly eroding and possibly cold-based ice in north Greenland makes it
difficult to constrain the deglaciation history based on 10Be ages
alone unless they are paired with in situ 14C ages. Further, combining
our findings with those of recently published studies reveals distinct
differences between deglaciation patterns of northwest and north Greenland.
Deglaciation of the land areas in northwest Greenland occurred earlier than
in north Greenland, and periods of restricted ice extent were longer,
spanning the Middle and Late Holocene. Overall, this highlights past ice sheet
sensitivity to Holocene climate changes in an area where little information
was available just a few years ago.
Funder
Aarhus Universitets Forskningsfond
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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