Abstract

The Prydz Bay continental shelf was sculpted by the Lambert Glacier–Amery Ice Shelf system, a large outlet glacier that drains 16% of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (Allison 1979; Fig. 1a). Prydz Channel (71–73° E; Fig. 1b) is a NW-trending cross-shelf trough (500–700 m deep) in western Prydz Bay that formed in the Pliocene, when the Lambert-Amery system first developed a fast-flowing ice stream (Fig. 1b; Cooper & O'Brien 2004). In Prydz Channel mega-scale glacial lineations (MSGLs) delineate the direction and orientation of past ice flow, and large grounding-zone wedges (GZWs; Batchelor & Dowdeswell 2015) in the inner channel mark the limit of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) ice advance about 250 km from the shelf edge (Fig. 1c, d, e). Fig. 1. Multibeam swath bathymetry and seismic-reflection profile of Prydz Channel, East Antarctica. ( a ) Location of study area (red box; map from IBCSO v. 1.0). ( b ) General bathymetry of Prydz Channel, delineated by the 500 m contour, and other relevant regional features. ( c ) Multibeam swath bathymetry of mega-scale glacial lineations (MSGLs) in Prydz Channel and grounding-zone …

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