Abstract

The McCarty Fjord iceberg-calving glacier and its land-terminating tributaries have fluctuated with some asynchroneity during the past two millennia. During advance, McCarty Glacier shed outwash along the fjord, and into ice-dammed tributaries inundating forests. A radioacarbon framework has revealed at least two major late Holocene glacial advances that occurred following a poorly documented expansion about 3600 BP. These two later advances are resolved within this fjord with tree-ring dating of in situ and transported tree trunks. The first event was an early medieval expansion of the McCarty trunk glacier beyond midfjord about 596 A.D.; this followed an interval of tree growth of at least 206 years. Tributary glaciers probably also advanced at this time. However, continuous tree-growth occurred in the distal (southern) tributary valleys during this advance, while northern tributaries were being dammed by the advancing trunk glacier. The down-valley extent of this expansion is thus constrained to a position within 12 km of the present contracted ice margin. The tree-ring refined chronology shows that a second McCarty ice expansion began in the 9th century, and reached midfjord by 900 A.D., and continued to advance through the Little Ice Age. In contrast, expansions of land-terminating glaciers here began after 1300 A.D. in concert with mountain glaciers worldwide. A log from a diamict cross-dated with a living tree-ring chronology shows that McCarty Glacier was advancing within a kilometer of its Little Ice Age maximum at 1790 A.D. Since about 1905 A.D., dramatic ice retreat has uncovered more than 20 km of McCarty Fjord.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

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