Abstract
We report geomorphic observations and cosmogenic-nuclide measurements on bedrock surfaces from three isolated nunatak groups in West Antarctica: the Pirrit Hills and Nash Hills, located in the Weddell Sea sector, and the Whitmore Mountains, located on the Ross-Weddell divide. The objectives of this paper are to (i) establish a chronology for landscape development at these sites and (ii) quantify the long-term history of ice-thickness variations in West Antarctica. These nunataks display relic alpine landscapes on which weathered bedrock surfaces are superimposed. In the Pirrit Hills, an erosional trimline is etched into alpine ridges and separates smooth-crested ridges below from serrated ridges above. Below the trimline, geomorphic evidence indicates repeated frozen-based ice cover, while above the trimline evidence for ice cover is entirely absent. There is also no geomorphic evidence for thicker-than-present ice at the Whitmore Mountains. Cosmogenic nuclide concentrations in the oldest bedrock surfaces from the Whitmore Mountains and from above the Pirrit Hills trimline indicate uninterrupted exposure for ∼12 Myr at extraordinarily low erosion rates. This places a lower limit on the timing of the formation of alpine landscapes in West Antarctica, and we hypothesize that this occurred during the relatively warm climates prior to the mid-Miocene cooling. The absence of evidence for thicker ice at the Whitmore Mountains is consistent with the hypothesis that the divide was typically thinner than present during Pleistocene glacial periods due to reduced accumulation. Bedrock surfaces below the trimline have much lower nuclide concentrations and are most easily explained by a scenario of repeated frozen-based ice cover and occasional subglacial plucking, which is consistent with geomorphic observations. Bedrock surfaces near the modern ice level appear to have been covered more than half of the time, while higher elevation surfaces indicate progressively less cover. The trimline and associated geomorphic features are very similar to a prominent trimline in the Ellsworth Mountains, and we conclude that these are, in fact, part of the same feature. The Ellsworth trimline is hypothesized to have formed during the mid-Miocene cooling and the transition from alpine to continental glaciation, and our results are consistent with this hypothesis.
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