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    Recent sedimentology at the grounding zone of the Kamb Ice stream, West Antarctica and implications for ice shelf extent

    Calkin, T and Dunbar, G.B. and Atkins, C and Carter, Andy and Coenen, J.J. and Eaves, S.E. and Ginnane, C.E. and Golledge, N.R. and Harwood, D.M. and Levy, R. and Hurwitz, B.C. and Hulbe, C. and Lawrence, J.D. and Marschalek, J.W. and Martin, A.P. and Mullen, A.D. and Neuhaus, S. and Quartini, E. and Schmidt, B.E. and Steven, C. and Turnbull, J.C. and Vermeesch, P. and Washam, P.M. (2024) Recent sedimentology at the grounding zone of the Kamb Ice stream, West Antarctica and implications for ice shelf extent. Quaternary Science Reviews 344 (108988), pp. 1-13. ISSN 0277-3791.

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    Abstract

    Sediment accumulating beneath floating ice contains a record of ice dynamics in polar regions where in situ observations are rare. In 2019 a hole was melted through a 590m-thick region of the Ross Ice Shelf ∼5 km seawards of the Kamb Ice Stream (KIS) grounding line (82.7841°S, 155.2626°W) to access the seafloor. Imagery from a remotely operated vehicle (ROV, Icefin) shows ocean current-generated ripples likely formed by tidal flow parallel to the grounding line (GL). Observed current speeds <0.15 m s−1 suggest these bedforms may be relict. Larger, dm-scale, ‘furrows’ parallel to the former direction of KIS flow may relate to past grounding line processes. A 0.49 m-long gravity core collected from the seafloor contains weakly stratified diamicton. The sediment matrix comprises variable mixtures of reworked Tertiary biogenic silica, predominantly diatoms, and arkose material. Sediment εNd values of ∼7 are consistent with derivation from the WAIS, as is the U-Pb age distribution and modelled late Holocene ice flows. Ramped pyrolysis 14C analysis shows all fractions are either >30 ka or 14C dead. By contrast, 210Pb-210 activity of >30 Bq Kg−1 indicates deposition within the last 120 years. The combination of features suggests rapid rainout deposition from melting of a sediment-laden basal debris layer as the GL retreated, followed by some reworking by ocean currents and little modern accumulation. Although Tertiary diatoms are abundant, unambiguously Late Quaternary forms are absent and we speculate on the implications for Ross Ice Shelf stability

    Metadata

    Item Type: Article
    School: Birkbeck Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Science > School of Natural Sciences
    Research Centres and Institutes: Earth and Planetary Sciences, Institute of
    Depositing User: Andy Carter
    Date Deposited: 24 Oct 2024 13:35
    Last Modified: 25 Oct 2024 00:00
    URI: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/54452

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