Origin, burial and preservation of late Pleistocene-age glacier ice in Arctic permafrost (Bylot Island, NU, Canada)
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Published:2019-01-11
Issue:1
Volume:13
Page:97-111
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Coulombe Stephanie,Fortier Daniel,Lacelle Denis,Kanevskiy Mikhail,Shur Yuri
Abstract
Abstract. Over the past decades, observations of buried glacier ice exposed in coastal
bluffs and headwalls of retrogressive thaw slumps of the Arctic have
indicated that considerable amounts of late Pleistocene glacier ice survived
the deglaciation and are still preserved in permafrost. In exposures, relict
glacier ice and intrasedimental ice often coexist and look alike but their
genesis is strikingly different. This paper aims to present a detailed
description and infer the origin of a massive ice body preserved in the
permafrost of Bylot Island (Nunavut). The massive ice exposure and core
samples were described according to the cryostratigraphic approach, combining
the analysis of permafrost cryofacies and cryostructures, ice
crystallography, stable O-H isotopes and cation contents. The ice was clear
to whitish in appearance with large crystals (cm) and small gas inclusions
(mm) at crystal intersections, similar to observations of englacial ice
facies commonly found on contemporary glaciers and ice sheets. However, the
δ18O composition (-34.0±0.4 ‰) of
the massive ice was markedly lower than contemporary glacier ice and was
consistent with the late Pleistocene age ice in the Barnes Ice Cap. This ice
predates the aggradation of the surrounding permafrost and can be used as an
archive to infer palaeo-environmental conditions at the study site. As most
of the glaciated Arctic landscapes are still strongly determined by their
glacial legacy, the melting of these large ice bodies could lead to extensive
slope failures and settlement of the ground surface, with significant impact
on permafrost geosystem landscape dynamics, terrestrial and aquatic
ecosystems and infrastructure.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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