Abstract

Understanding the triggers and pace of marine-based ice sheet decay is critical for constraining the future mass loss and dynamic behaviour of marine-based sectors of the large polar ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica. Numerical models which seek to predict this behaviour need to be calibrated against data from both contemporary and palaeo-ice sheets, and the latter requires accurate reconstruction of former ice sheet extent, dynamics and timing. Marine geophysics, sediment cores, benthic foraminiferal assemblages and radiocarbon dating are used to reconstruct the extent of the last British-Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS), and the timing and style of its retreat on the Atlantic shelf northwest of Ireland. Shelf edge moraines and subglacial till recovered in cores from the outer continental shelf are dated to younger than 26.3 ka cal BP and indicate an extensive ice sheet at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) that was grounded to the shelf edge. Nested arcuate moraines record the subsequent episodic retreat of the ice sheet across the shelf. Lithofacies and associated foraminiferal assemblages demonstrate that this retreat occurred in a glacimarine environment as a grounded tidewater margin and that high relative sea level and cold waters prevailed during retreat. Radiocarbon dates indicate that the timing of initial ice sheet retreat from the shelf edge occurred in the interval between 26.3 and 24.8 ka cal BP, during the period of minimum global eustatic sea level, and that the ice sheet had retreated to the mid-shelf by 24.8 ka cal BP. The ‘Donegal Bay Moraine’, a large moraine at the mouth of Donegal Bay, records a major stillstand and readvance of the ice sheet during deglaciation between 20.2 and 17.9 ka cal BP. Estimated retreat rates of 5.5–35 m a−1 across the shelf demonstrate that retreat was slow. It is noteworthy that retreat was initiated in the absence of ocean warming and when eustatic sea level was at a minimum. The sea-level rise that initiated deglaciation from the shelf edge therefore, is inferred to have been a product of local glacio-isostatic crustal depression rather than external forcing. This demonstrates that marine-based sectors of ice sheets can trigger their own demise internally through glacio-isostatic adjustment and it provides an explanation for the early retreat of the BIIS on the Atlantic shelf during the global LGM (gLGM).

Highlights

  • Understanding the dynamic behaviour of marine-based sectors of large ice sheets is of considerable importance due to the potential inherent instability of these ice masses and their impact on sea level (Bamber et al, 2007; Rignot et al, 2014; Joughin et al, 2014)

  • Ó Cofaigh et al (2012) suggested an local Last Glacial Maximum (lLGM) age for the shelf-edge advance offshore Donegal Bay based on comparison to the timing of British-Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) iceberg-rafted debris (IRD) fluxes onto the Barra Fan which implied that maximum ice sheet growth was attained by 24 cal ka BP and deglaciation occurred at 23 cal ka BP (Scourse et al, 2009)

  • On the Atlantic shelf northwest of Ireland, arcuate moraines imaged in multibeam swath bathymetric and sub-bottom profiler data on the outer shelf and subglacial tills in sediment cores record the former extension of a grounded BIIS to the shelf edge

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the dynamic behaviour of marine-based sectors of large ice sheets is of considerable importance due to the potential inherent instability of these ice masses and their impact on sea level (Bamber et al, 2007; Rignot et al, 2014; Joughin et al, 2014). Numerical ice sheet models that seek to predict the future dynamic behaviour of marine-based ice sheets and, in particular, how they will deglaciate in response to a warming climate are often limited by the short time period over which modern observations extend. Such models are strengthened when tested against chronologically, geomorphologically and stratigraphically well-constrained retreat histories extending over centuries to millennia for individual ice sheets and ice sheet sectors (e.g., Lecavalier et al, 2011; Bentley et al, 2014; Stroeven et al, 2016). The application of improved marine geophysical techniques such as multibeam swath bathymetry (e.g., Van Landeghem et al, 2009; Dunlop et al, 2011; Ó Cofaigh et al, 2012) and the compilation of single beam datasets such as OLEX (Bradwell et al, 2008;; C. Clark et al, 2012; Sejrup et al, 2016) has accelerated this research on the continental shelves adjoining Ireland and Britain

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