Glacier response to the Little Ice Age during the Neoglacial cooling in Greenland
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24428Dato
2022-03-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Kjær, Kurt H.; Bjørk, Anders A.; Kjeldsen, Kristian K.; Hansen, Eric S.; Andresen, Camilla S.; Siggaard-Andersen, Marie-Louise; Khan, Shfaqat Abbas; Søndergaard, Anne Sofie; Colgan, William; Schomacker, Anders; Woodroffe, Sarah; Funder, Svend; Rouillard, Alexandra; Jensen, Jens Fog; Larsen, Nicolaj K.Sammendrag
In the Northern Hemisphere, an insolation driven Early to Middle Holocene Thermal Maximum was followed by
a Neoglacial cooling that culminated during the Little Ice Age (LIA). Here, we review the glacier response to this
Neoglacial cooling in Greenland. Changes in the ice margins of outlet glaciers from the Greenland Ice Sheet as
well as local glaciers and ice caps are synthesized Greenland-wide. In addition, we compare temperature reconstructions from ice cores, elevation changes of the ice sheet across Greenland and oceanographic reconstructions from marine sediment cores over the past 5,000 years. The data are derived from a comprehensive
review of the literature supplemented with unpublished reports. Our review provides a synthesis of the sensitivity of the Greenland ice margins and their variability, which is critical to understanding how Neoglacial glacier
activity was interrupted by the current anthropogenic warming. We have reconstructed three distinct periods of
glacier expansion from our compilation: two older Neoglacial advances at 2,500 – 1,700 yrs. BP (Before Present
= 1950 CE, Common Era) and 1,250 – 950 yrs. BP; followed by a general advance during the younger Neoglacial
between 700-50 yrs. BP, which represents the LIA. There is still insufficient data to outline the detailed spatiotemporal relationships between these periods of glacier expansion. Many glaciers advanced early in the Neoglacial and persisted in close proximity to their present-day position until the end of the LIA. Thus, the LIA
response to Northern Hemisphere cooling must be seen within the wider context of the entire Neoglacial period
of the past 5,000 years. Ice expansion appears to be closely linked to changes in ice sheet elevation, accumulation, and temperature as well as surface-water cooling in the surrounding oceans. At least for the two youngest
Neoglacial advances, volcanic forcing triggering a sea-ice /ocean feedback, could explain their initiation. There
are probably several LIA glacier fluctuations since the first culmination close to 1250 CE (Common Era) and
available data suggests ice culminations in the 1400s, early to mid-1700s and early to mid-1800s CE. The last LIA
maxima lasted until the present deglaciation commenced around 50 yrs. BP (1900 CE). The constraints provided
here on the timing and magnitude of LIA glacier fluctuations delivers a more realistic background validation for
modelling future ice sheet stability.
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Kjær, Bjørk, Kjeldsen, Hansen, Andresen, Siggaard-Andersen, Khan, Søndergaard, Colgan, Schomacker, Woodroffe, Funder, Rouillard, Jensen, Larsen. Glacier response to the Little Ice Age during the Neoglacial cooling in Greenland. Earth-Science Reviews. 2022;227:1-43Metadata
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