Evolution of the Laurentide and Innuitian ice sheets prior to the Last Glacial Maximum (115 ka to 25 ka)

被引:58
|
作者
Dalton, April S. [1 ,2 ]
Stokes, Chris R. [1 ]
Batchelor, Christine L. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Durham, Dept Geog, Durham, England
[2] Charles Univ Prague, Dept Phys Geog & Geoecol, Prague, Czech Republic
[3] Newcastle Univ, Sch Geog Polit & Sociol, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear, England
关键词
Wisconsinan Stade; Last Glacial Maximum; Keewatin Dome; Labrador Dome; Last glacial cycle; HUDSON-BAY LOWLANDS; WISCONSINAN DRIFT STRATIGRAPHY; LATE PLEISTOCENE STRATIGRAPHY; MAGDALEN ISLANDS ARCHIPELAGO; MISSISSIPPI RIVER VALLEY; LAKE-MICHIGAN LOBE; ST-LAWRENCE VALLEY; SEA-LEVEL CHANGE; ELLESMERE-ISLAND; BAFFIN-ISLAND;
D O I
10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103875
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The Laurentide Ice Sheet was the largest global ice mass to grow and decay during the last glacial cycle (-115 ka to-10 ka). Despite its importance for driving major changes in global mean sea level, long-term landscape evolution, and atmospheric circulation patterns, the history of the Laurentide (and neighbouring Innuitian) Ice Sheet is poorly constrained owing to sporadic preservation of stratigraphic records prior to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM;-25 ka) and a case-study approach to the dating of available evidence. Here, we synthesize available geochronological data from the glaciated region, together with published stratigraphic and geomorphological data, as well as numerical modelling output, to derive 19 hypothesised reconstructions of the Laurentide and Innuitian ice sheets from 115 ka to 25 ka at 5-kyr intervals, with uncertainties quantified to include best, minimum, and maximum ice extent estimates at each time-step. Our work suggests that, between 115 ka and 25 ka, some areas of North America experienced multiple cycles of rapid ice sheet growth and decay, while others remained largely ice-free, and others were continuously glaciated. Key findings include: (i) the growth and recession of the Laurentide Ice Sheet from 115 ka through 80 ka; (ii) significant build-up of ice to almost LGM extent at-60 ka; (iii) a potentially dramatic reduction in North American ice at-45 ka; (iv) a rapid expansion of the Labrador Dome at-38 ka; and (v) gradual growth toward the LGM starting at-35 ka. Some reconstructions are only loosely constrained and are therefore speculative (especially prior to 45 ka). Nevertheless, this work represents our most up-to-date understanding of the build-up of the Laurentide and Innuitian ice sheets during the last glacial cycle to the LGM based on the available evidence. We consider these ice configurations as a series of testable hypotheses for future work to address and refine. These results are important for use across a range of disciplines including ice sheet modelling, palaeoclimatology and archaeology and are available digitally.
引用
收藏
页数:33
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The relative influence of Laurentide and local ice sheets during the last glacial maximum in the eastern Chic-Chocs Range, northern Gaspe Peninsula, Quebec
    Olejczyk, Pawel
    Gray, James T.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2007, 44 (11) : 1603 - 1625
  • [32] Climatic instability, ice sheets and ocean dynamics at high northern latitudes during the last glacial period (58-10 ka BP)
    Rasmussen, TL
    VanWeering, TCE
    Labeyrie, L
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 1997, 16 (01) : 71 - 80
  • [33] Coupling an AGCM with an ISM to investigate the ice sheets mass balance at the Last Glacial Maximum
    Fabre, Adeline
    Ramstein, Gilles
    Ritz, Catherine
    Pinot, Sophie
    Fournier, Nicolas
    Geophysical Research Letters, 1998, 25 (04): : 531 - 534
  • [34] Coupling an AGCM with an ISM to investigate the ice sheets mass balance at the last glacial maximum
    Fabre, A
    Ramstein, G
    Ritz, C
    Pinot, S
    Fournier, N
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1998, 25 (04) : 531 - 534
  • [35] THE LAURENTIDE ICE-SHEET THROUGH THE LAST GLACIAL CYCLE - THE TOPOLOGY OF DRIFT LINEATIONS AS A KEY TO THE DYNAMIC BEHAVIOR OF FORMER ICE SHEETS
    BOULTON, GS
    CLARK, CD
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF EDINBURGH-EARTH SCIENCES, 1990, 81 : 327 - 347
  • [36] Timing of advance and basal condition of the Laurentide Ice Sheet during the last glacial maximum in the Richardson Mountains, NWT
    Lacelle, Denis
    Lauriol, Bernard
    Zazula, Grant
    Ghaleb, Bassam
    Utting, Nicholas
    Clark, Ian D.
    QUATERNARY RESEARCH, 2013, 80 (02) : 274 - 283
  • [37] Early last glacial maximum in the southern Central Andes reveals northward shift of the westerlies at ∼39 ka
    Zech, R.
    Zech, J.
    Kull, Ch.
    Kubik, P. W.
    Veit, H.
    CLIMATE OF THE PAST, 2011, 7 (01) : 41 - 46
  • [38] Radiocarbon constraints on the history of the western Irish ice sheet prior to the Last Glacial Maximum
    McCabe, A. Marshall
    Clark, Peter U.
    Clark, Jorie
    GEOLOGY, 2007, 35 (02) : 147 - 150
  • [39] Human refugia in Australia during the Last Glacial Maximum and Terminal Pleistocene: a geospatial analysis of the 25-12 ka Australian archaeological record
    Williams, Alan N.
    Ulm, Sean
    Cook, Andrew R.
    Langley, Michelle C.
    Collard, Mark
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2013, 40 (12) : 4612 - 4625
  • [40] Simulated influence of carbon dioxide, orbital forcing and ice sheets on the climate of the Last Glacial Maximum
    Andrew J. Weaver
    Michael Eby
    Augustus F. Fanning
    Edward C. Wiebe
    Nature, 1998, 394 : 847 - 853