Abstract

AbstractThis paper describes measurements of concentrations of cosmogenic 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne in quartz from bedrock surfaces in the Transantarctic Mountains where stratigraphic and geomorphic evidence shows that the surfaces were covered by ice in the past, but were not glacially eroded during periods of ice cover. It then explores to what extent this information can be used to learn about past ice sheet change. First, cosmogenic nuclide concentrations in sandstone bedrock surfaces at two sites in the McMurdo Dry Valleys near 77°S are consistent with an equilibrium between nuclide production and loss by surface erosion and radioactive decay. They are most easily explained by a scenario in which: i) sites more than c. 100 m above the present ice surface were almost never ice-covered and eroded steadily at 0.5–1.5 m Ma-1, and ii) sites near the present ice margin experienced similar erosion rates when ice-free, but have been covered by cold-based, non-erosive glacier ice as much as half of the time during the past several million years. Nuclide concentrations in granite bedrock at a site in the Quartz Hills near 85°S, on the other hand, have not reached production-erosion equilibrium, thus retaining evidence of the time they were first exposed to the cosmic ray flux. Nuclide concentrations at these sites are most easily explained by 4–6 Ma exposure, extremely low erosion rates of 5–10 cm Ma-1 during periods of exposure, and only very short periods of cold-based, non-erosive ice cover.

Highlights

  • In this paper, we describe measurements of the cosmic ray-produced radionuclides 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne from intermittently glaciated bedrock surfaces in the Transantarctic Mountains

  • These bedrock surfaces are characteristic of much of the landscape of the Transantarctic Mountains in that geomorphic and stratigraphic evidence shows that they were covered by ice at least once in the past, but the bedrock surfaces themselves lack any evidence of glacial modification and display only features associated with subaerial weathering and granular disintegration (e.g. Sugden et al 1999, 2005, Sugden & Denton 2004)

  • In Beacon Group sandstone bedrock surfaces at two sites in the Dry Valleys, 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne concentrations are most explained by the following scenario

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We describe measurements of the cosmic ray-produced radionuclides 26Al, 10Be and 21Ne from intermittently glaciated bedrock surfaces in the Transantarctic Mountains These bedrock surfaces are characteristic of much of the landscape of the Transantarctic Mountains in that geomorphic and stratigraphic evidence shows that they were covered by ice at least once in the past, but the bedrock surfaces themselves lack any evidence of glacial modification and display only features associated with subaerial weathering and granular disintegration If a quartz sample experiences a single period of surface exposure, 26Al and 10Be concentrations are uniquely related to the exposure time by their production ratio and decay constants If this period of exposure is interrupted by periods during which the sample is shielded from the cosmic ray flux, the 26Al inventory will decay faster than 10Be during these periods, the 26Al/10Be ratio will no longer conform to this relationship. Disequilibrium between 26Al and 10Be concentrations can be used to identify surfaces that have experienced complex exposure histories (Klein et al 1986, Nishiizumi et al 1986, Lal 1991)

Objectives
Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.