Abstract

The remains of a small volcanic centre are preserved on a thin bedrock ridge at Harrow Peaks, northern Victoria Land, Antarctica. The outcrop is interpreted as a monogenetic tuff cone relict formed by a hydrovolcanic (phreatomagmatic) eruption of mafic magma at 642 ± 20 ka (by 40Ar-39Ar), corresponding to the peak of the Marine Isotope Stage 16 (MIS16) glacial. Although extensively dissected and strewn with glacial erratics, the outcrop shows no evidence for erosion by ice. From interpretation of the lithofacies and eruptive mechanisms, the weight of the evidence suggests that eruptions took place under a cold-based (frozen-bed) ice sheet. This is the first time that a tuff cone erupted under cold ice has been described. The most distinctive feature of the lithofacies is the dominance of massive lapilli tuff rich in fine ash matrix and abraded lapilli. The lack of stratification is probably due to repeated eruption through a conduit blasted through the ice covering the vent. The ice thickness is uncertain but it might have been as little as 100 m and the preserved tephra accumulated mainly as a crater (or ice conduit) infill. The remainder of the tuff cone edifice was probably deposited supraglacially and underwent destruction by ice advection and, particularly, collapse during a younger interglacial. Dating using 10Be cosmogenic exposure of granitoid basement erratics indicates that the erratics are unrelated to the eruptive period. The 10Be ages suggest that the volcanic outcrop was most recently exposed by ice decay at c. 20.8 ± 0.8 ka (MIS2) and the associated ice was thicker than at 642 ka and probably polythermal rather than cold-based, which is normally assumed for the period.

Highlights

  • In glaciated terrains, the volcanic morphologies and lithofacies of the volcanic products are valuable indicators for palaeo-ice type, thickness and extent (see Smellie and Edwards (2016) and Smellie for complete reviews)

  • We describe the results of a linked glaciovolcanic–cosmogenic nuclide study of a volcanic outcrop in northern Victoria Land, Antarctica

  • From our study of the Harrow Peaks tuff cone outcrop, we suggest that the eruption took place at 642 ± 20 ka under a cold ice cover with a minimum local surface elevation of c

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Summary

Introduction

The volcanic morphologies and lithofacies of the volcanic products are valuable indicators (proxies) for palaeo-ice type, thickness and extent (see Smellie and Edwards (2016) and Smellie (in press) for complete reviews). The broad characteristics of eruptions under cold-based ice have been treated theoretically (Smellie 2009, 2013), but there are no known published examples of volcanic sequences formed as a result of explosive eruptions under cold ice. Glacial thermal regime affects ice velocity, erosional and depositional rates ( landforms), sediment loads, water chemistry, mass balance and the response time of ice to climate change and consequent effects on global sea levels (Benn and Evans 1998). Being able to identify reliably the thermal regimes of past ice is important for palaeoenvironmental studies as well as for validating forward models of the effects of climate change (e.g. IPCC 2013)

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