Abstract
Determining the spatial and temporal variations of Pleistocene glaciations is key to understanding present-day climate-driven glacier changes. Glacial chronologies of high-mountain Asia, which are mostly based on cosmogenic 10Be exposure dating of moraine boulders, remain scarce and often inaccurate due to geologically induced age scatter. We present 53 new 10Be exposure ages from rockslides, glacial sediment deposits and glacial erosion surfaces in the southwestern Pamir. In conjunction with previously published 10Be data, we constrain the timing and extent of three major glacial stages in the Pamir. During the Middle Pleistocene, a continuous ice sheet covered most of the Pamir. This stage is older than 200 ka and may have occurred during Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 8, 10, or 12. The deep valleys of the western Pamir, which contrast with the eastern Pamir plateau, are partly attributed to Middle Pleistocene glacial erosion. Successively less extensive glacial advances occurred during MIS-4/5 (between 60 and 100 ka ago) and during MIS-2 (at 18–22 ka). The last glacial maximum was synchronous in most of the Pamir, except for prolonged glaciation of the Muztagh Ata ice cap until 14 ka ago. Similar to today, Late Pleistocene glaciers were precipitation-limited, with moisture mainly supplied by westerly winds. An episode of increased mass wasting (e.g. Zuvor rockslide: 34 ± 1 ka) and glacier surging correlates with a peak in δ18O values in the Guliya ice core and is attributed to a warmer climate.
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