Abstract

AbstractA finite-difference computer model was used to reconstruct a steady-state ice sheet over the western Barents Sea and the Svalbard archipelago at the last glacial maximum 18 000 BP. Flowlines were reconstructed from the ice margin to the ice dome based on information about glacial geology, bedrock topography, basal thermal regime and the present precipitation pattern. The modelling result suggests a 1700 m high marine ice dome east of Spitsbergen and a 1350 m high terrestrial dome over northwest Spitsbergen. Over most of the terrestrial areas, the bed is frozen while in the marine areas the bed is thawed. This is in agreement with both the terrestrial and the marine glacial geology records. The height of the terrestrial dome implies that the ice sheet was thin and left several of the higher mountain peaks as nunataks. Three major ice streams were reconstructed in the most pronounced over-deepened marine channels. This modelling experiment did not allow any major ice streams in the fjords of Spitsbergen during steady-state conditions.

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