Abstract

This paper compiles and reviews marine and terrestrial data constraining the dimensions and configuration of the Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet (APIS) from the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) through deglaciation to the present day. These data are used to reconstruct grounding-line retreat in 5 ka time-steps from 25 ka BP to present. Glacial landforms and subglacial tills on the eastern and western Antarctic Peninsula (AP) shelf indicate that the APIS was grounded to the outer shelf/shelf edge at the LGM and contained a series of fast-flowing ice streams that drained along cross-shelf bathymetric troughs. The ice sheet was grounded at the shelf edge until ∼20 cal ka BP. Chronological control on retreat is provided by radiocarbon dates on glacimarine sediments from the shelf troughs and on lacustrine and terrestrial organic remains, as well as cosmogenic nuclide dates on erratics and ice moulded bedrock. Retreat in the east was underway by about 18 cal ka BP. The earliest dates on recession in the west are from Bransfield Basin where recession was underway by 17.5 cal ka BP. Ice streams were active during deglaciation at least until the ice sheet had pulled back to the mid-shelf. The timing of initial retreat decreased progressively southwards along the western AP shelf; the large ice stream in Marguerite Trough may have remained grounded at the shelf edge until about 14 cal ka BP, although terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide ages indicate that thinning had commenced by 18 ka BP. Between 15 and 10 cal ka BP the APIS underwent significant recession along the western AP margin, although retreat between individual troughs was asynchronous. Ice in Marguerite Trough may have still been grounded on the mid-shelf at 10 cal ka BP. In the Larsen-A region the transition from grounded to floating ice was established by 10.7–10.6 cal ka BP. The APIS had retreated towards its present configuration in the western AP by the mid-Holocene but on the eastern peninsula may have approached its present configuration several thousand years earlier, by the start of the Holocene. Mid to late-Holocene retreat was diachronous with stillstands, re-advances and changes in ice-shelf configuration being recorded in most places. Subglacial topography exerted a major control on grounding-line retreat with grounding-zone wedges, and thus by inference slow-downs or stillstands in the retreat of the grounding line, occurring in some cases on reverse bed slopes.

Highlights

  • The Antarctic Peninsula (AP) (Fig. 1) is arguably the most intensively studied region in Antarctica

  • The aim of this paper is to summarise the current knowledge of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) to present ice sheet history for the AP and provide a series of time-slice reconstructions depicting changes in ice-sheet extent and thickness based on terrestrial and marine geomorphological and geological evidence

  • The resulting ice sheet retreat history, along the western AP continental shelf, is one of the best constrained in Antarctica

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Summary

Introduction

The Antarctic Peninsula (AP) (Fig. 1) is arguably the most intensively studied region in Antarctica. Advances in cosmogenic nuclide surface exposure dating of glacially-transported boulders and bedrock surfaces, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) of beach cobbles, and radiocarbon dates of lacustrine and terrestrial deposits onshore constrain the timing of terrestrial ice retreat and especially icesheet thinning (e.g., Bentley et al, 2006, 2011; Johnson et al, 2011; Hodgson et al, 2013; Simkins et al, 2013; Glasser et al, 2014) Such palaeo-glaciological reconstructions have wider significance because they provide information on the former subglacial processes controlling ice sheet dynamics, for example, through imaging and sampling the former ice-sheet bed using ship-based geophysical methods and coring. They provide a long-term palaeo-glaciological perspective on ice sheet change over centennial to millennial timescales

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