Distinct modes of meltwater drainage and landform development beneath the last Barents Sea ice sheet
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/29023Date
2023-04-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Shackleton, Calvin; Patton, Henry; Winsborrow, Monica; Esteves, Mariana; Bjarnadòttir, Lilja Rùn; Andreassen, Karin MarieAbstract
The flow of glacial ice is impacted by basal meltwater drainage systems that
fluctuate on a continuum from distributed, high-pressure environments to
channelized, lower pressure networks. Understanding the long-term
development of dominant drainage modes and impacts on ice flow and
landform development is a crucial step in predicting palaeo and contemporary
ice-mass response to changes in climate. The spatial and temporal scales at which
different drainage modes operate are largely unknown, and the geomorphological
legacy of subglacial meltwater networks that evolve over a glaciation provide
composite records of drainage system development. Here, we use highresolution bathymetric data from shallow banks in the central Barents Sea to
map the geomorphological imprint of meltwater drainage beneath the collapsing
marine-based Barents Sea Ice Sheet (BSIS). We observe a succession of distinct
meltwater landforms that provide relative timing constraints for subglacial
drainage modes, indicating that extensive networks of channelized drainage
were in operation during deglaciation. Interlinked basins and channels suggest
that meltwater availability and drainage system development was influenced by
filling and draining cycles in subglacial lakes. Networks of eskers also indicate
near-margin meltwater conduits incised into basal ice during late-stage
deglaciation, and we suggest that these systems were supplemented by
increased inputs from supraglacial melting. The abundance of meltwater
during the late stages of BSIS deglaciation likely contributed to elevated
erosion of the sedimentary substrate and the mobilisation of subglacial
sediments, providing a sediment source for the relatively abundant eskers
found deposited across bank areas. A newly discovered beaded esker system
over 67 km long in Hopendjupet constrains a fluctuating, but generally
decelerating, pace of ice retreat from ~1,600 m ca-1 to ~620 m ca−1 over
central Barents Sea bank areas during a 91-year timespan.
Publisher
Frontiers MediaCitation
Shackleton, Patton, Winsborrow, Esteves, Bjarnadòttir, Andreassen. Distinct modes of meltwater drainage and landform development beneath the last Barents Sea ice sheet. Frontiers in Earth Science. 2023Metadata
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