Open Research will be unavailable from 3am to 7am on Thursday 4th December 2025 AEDT due to scheduled maintenance.
 

Sediment controls dynamic behavior of a Cordilleran Ice Stream at the Last Glacial Maximum

Date

Authors

Cowan, Ellen A
Zellers, Sarah D
Muller, Juliane
Walczak, M H
Worthington, Lindsay L
Caissie, Beth E
Clary, Wesley A
Jaeger, John M
Gulick, Sean P S
Pratt, Jacob W

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Macmillan Publishers Ltd

Abstract

The uncertain response of marine terminating outlet glaciers to climate change at time scales beyond short-term observation limits models of future sea level rise. At temperate tidewater margins, abundant subglacial meltwater forms morainal banks (marine shoals) or ice-contact deltas that reduce water depth, stabilizing grounding lines and slowing or reversing glacial retreat. Here we present a radiocarbon-dated record from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Site U1421 that tracks the terminus of the largest Alaskan Cordilleran Ice Sheet outlet glacier during Last Glacial Maximum climate transitions. Sedimentation rates, ice-rafted debris, and microfossil and biogeochemical proxies, show repeated abrupt collapses and slow advances typical of the tidewater glacier cycle observed in modern systems. When global sea level rise exceeded the local rate of bank building, the cycle of readvances stopped leading to irreversible retreat. These results support theory that suggests sediment dynamics can control tidewater terminus position on an open shelf under temperate conditions delaying climate-driven retreat

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Nature Communications

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Restricted until