Abstract

AbstractAt both corners of the now stagnant Kamb Ice Stream (KIS, West Antarctica) outlet, shear margins of different ages confine wedge-shaped areas with relatively flat, smooth surfaces that stagnated before the main trunk of the ice stream. We identify these features as lakes or past lakes, and consider scenarios for their development in a regional history of ongoing adjustment to grounding-line position. We focus here on the centuries leading up to the recent stagnation of KIS, a time when its grounding line appears to have advanced >100km from an earlier upstream location. Starting from stagnation of Crary Ice Rise and changes in the grounding zone of Whillans Ice Stream, we trace feedbacks associated with local thickening, ice grounding and thickness transients that both advance the grounding line and leave remnant lakes in their wake. These lakes in turn promote the development of secondary margins that may appear as ‘margin jumps’ in the ice record.

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