Abstract

Results from a recent time-dependent ice-sheet modelling study of the late Weichselian Svalbard—Barents Sea ice sheet suggest that, under environmental conditions representative of those during the late Weichselian, ice derived solely from Svalbard may have occupied only the relatively shallow (<300 m water depth) northwestern Barents Sea, with other deeper regions remaining free of grounded ice (Siegert and Dowdeswell, 1995a). However, late Weichselian geological information from the 400 m deep Bjørnøyrenna (southern Barents Sea) indicates that grounded ice was present in an area modelled by Siegert and Dowdeswell (1995a) as free of ice (e.g. Laberg and Vorren, in press a). Isostatic uplift of the central Barents Sea may have reduced the relative sea level and hence provided a mechanism by which grounded ice could have migrated from relatively shallow regions of the Barents Sea into, previous to uplift, deeper water. We have used an isostatic Earth model to determine the geometry of an isostatic forebulge within the late Weichselian Barents Sea, caused by ice loads over Svalbard, Franz Josef Land, Novaya Zemlya and Fennoscandia. These data were then used as input to a time-dependent glaciological model, in order to predict further information about the magnitude of bedrock uplift required to allow grounded ice to flow from Svalbard into the central and southern Barents Sea. Our experiments suggest that grounded ice, originating from Svalbard, is able to form over Sentralbanken, providing that at least 60 m of uplift is achieved in the central Barents Sea. Grounded ice within Bjørnøyrenna was only predicted when the amplitude of the local forebulge exceeded 250 m.

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