Abstract

ABSTRACTUnderstanding the pace and drivers of marine‐based ice‐sheet retreat relies upon the integration of numerical ice‐sheet models with observations from contemporary polar ice sheets and well‐constrained palaeo‐glaciological reconstructions. This paper provides a reconstruction of the retreat of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) from the Atlantic shelf west of Ireland during and following the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). It uses marine‐geophysical data and sediment cores dated by radiocarbon, combined with terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide and optically stimulated luminescence dating of onshore ice‐marginal landforms, to reconstruct the timing and rate of ice‐sheet retreat from the continental shelf and across the adjoining coastline of Ireland, thus including the switch from a marine‐ to a terrestrially‐based ice‐sheet margin. Seafloor bathymetric data in the form of moraines and grounding‐zone wedges on the continental shelf record an extensive ice sheet west of Ireland during the LGM which advanced to the outer shelf. This interpretation is supported by the presence of dated subglacial tills and overridden glacimarine sediments from across the Porcupine Bank, a westwards extension of the Irish continental shelf. The ice sheet was grounded on the outer shelf at ~26.8 ka cal bp with initial retreat underway by 25.9 ka cal bp. Retreat was not a continuous process but was punctuated by marginal oscillations until ~24.3 ka cal bp. The ice sheet thereafter retreated to the mid‐shelf where it formed a large grounding‐zone complex at ~23.7 ka cal bp. This retreat occurred in a glacimarine environment. The Aran Islands on the inner continental shelf were ice‐free by ~19.5 ka bp and the ice sheet had become largely terrestrially based by 17.3 ka bp. This suggests that the Aran Islands acted to stabilize and slow overall ice‐sheet retreat once the BIIS margin had reached the inner shelf. Our results constrain the timing of initial retreat of the BIIS from the outer shelf west of Ireland to the period of minimum global eustatic sea level. Initial retreat was driven, at least in part, by glacio‐isostatically induced, high relative sea level. Net rates of ice‐sheet retreat across the shelf were slow (62–19 m a−1) and reduced (8 m a−1) as the ice sheet vacated the inner shelf and moved onshore. A picture therefore emerges of an extensive BIIS on the Atlantic shelf west of Ireland, in which early, oscillatory retreat was followed by slow episodic retreat which decelerated further as the ice margin became terrestrially based. More broadly, this demonstrates the importance of localized controls, in particular bed topography, on modulating the retreat of marine‐based sectors of ice sheets.

Highlights

  • At its maximum around 27 ka BP during the last glacial period, the British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) covered Ireland and much of Britain and had an ice volume with a sea level equivalent of ~2.5 m (Clark et al, 2012)

  • The term ‘global Last Glacial Maximum’ is used in this paper to refer to the period 26.5–19 ka when eustatic sea level was at a minimum because of global ice volume being at its highest (Clark et al, 2009)

  • We use the detailed description of the seabed geomorphology of the Porcupine Bank and Slyne Trough by Thébaudeau et al (2016), concentrating on the northern sector of the Porcupine Bank, including the outer shelf, and the Slyne Trough

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Summary

Introduction

At its maximum around 27 ka BP during the last glacial period, the British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) covered Ireland and much of Britain and had an ice volume with a sea level equivalent of ~2.5 m (Clark et al, 2012). On the Atlantic shelf bordering west and northwest Ireland, previous work has documented glacial geomorphological and sedimentological evidence recording the advance and retreat of the BIIS across the continental shelf, typically to the shelf edge, during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) (Benetti et al, 2010; Dunlop et al, 2010; Ó Cofaigh et al, 2012a, 2019; Callard et al, 2018, 2020; Peters et al, 2015, 2016, 2020; Roberts et al, 2020; Craven et al, 2021) These studies have shown that the ice sheet retreated in a glacimarine environment and radiocarbon dates on marine fauna in deglacial glacimarine sediments constrain the timing of this retreat. The lLGM for the BIIS was attained at c. 27 ka (Clark et al, 2012; Scourse et al, 2019), and slightly earlier than the gLGM

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