Deciphering patterns of postglacial sea level at the junction of the Laurentide and Innuitian Ice Sheets, western Canadian High Arctic

2014 ◽  
Vol 91 ◽  
pp. 165-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Chantel Nixon ◽  
John H. England ◽  
Patrick Lajeunesse ◽  
Michelle A. Hanson
2000 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 182-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott F. Lamoureux ◽  
John H. England

Geomorphic and chronological evidence from Cornwall Island in the Canadian High Arctic Archipelago provides direct evidence for the age and dynamics of the center and northern flank of the Innuitian Ice Sheet that covered the islands during the Late Wisconsonian glacial maximum. Dispersal of erratics and glacial landforms indicate that ice flowed north across the island and converged with ice flowing northwest from Norwegian Bay. Cornwall Island was initially deglaciated at 9000 14C yr B.P. in near synchrony with widely separated sites in adjacent parts of the archipelago. This regional chronology suggests rapid breakup of a marine-based Innuitian Ice Sheet that was destabilized by rapid eustatic sea-level rise and ice thinning during the early Holocene. This evidence provides strong support for a recently proposed ice divide spanning the central part of the Canadian High Arctic and indicates that most, if not all, of the region was glaciated during the Late Wisconsinan.


1978 ◽  
Vol 20 (83) ◽  
pp. 393-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
John England ◽  
R. S. Bradley ◽  
G. H. Miller

AbstractMoraines deposited by the outermost ice advance across Judge Daly Promontory, northeastern Ellesmere Island, reflect thin, topographically controlled ice lobes extending to sea-level. The termini of two ice lobes were investigated and both produced ice shelves where they flowed into isostatically depressed embayments along western Kennedy Channel. Morphological evidence for these ice shelves occurs at the entrance to these valleys where steeply descending lateral moraines become abruptly horizontal for 2 km. In addition, both the horizontal moraines and associated pro-glacial terraces are fossiliferous down-valley from the apparent grounding line. Based on the differences in elevation between the horizontal moraines and the valley bottoms, the two ice shelves had estimated thicknesses ofc. 110 and 150 m. A proglacial outwash terrace at 175 m a.s.l. is considered to represent the approximate relative sea-level during the formation and break-up of the ice shelves. This relative sea-level is consistent with the water depths required to float the calculated ice thicknesses in both valleys. Associated with these ice margins are finite14C dates of 28 000-30 000 B.P. and amino-acid age estimates of >35 000 B.P. The importance and likelihood of additional past ice shelves in the Canadian High Arctic is discussed.


1978 ◽  
Vol 20 (83) ◽  
pp. 393-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
John England ◽  
R. S. Bradley ◽  
G. H. Miller

AbstractMoraines deposited by the outermost ice advance across Judge Daly Promontory, northeastern Ellesmere Island, reflect thin, topographically controlled ice lobes extending to sea-level. The termini of two ice lobes were investigated and both produced ice shelves where they flowed into isostatically depressed embayments along western Kennedy Channel. Morphological evidence for these ice shelves occurs at the entrance to these valleys where steeply descending lateral moraines become abruptly horizontal for 2 km. In addition, both the horizontal moraines and associated pro-glacial terraces are fossiliferous down-valley from the apparent grounding line. Based on the differences in elevation between the horizontal moraines and the valley bottoms, the two ice shelves had estimated thicknesses ofc. 110 and 150 m. A proglacial outwash terrace at 175 m a.s.l. is considered to represent the approximate relative sea-level during the formation and break-up of the ice shelves. This relative sea-level is consistent with the water depths required to float the calculated ice thicknesses in both valleys. Associated with these ice margins are finite14C dates of 28 000-30 000 B.P. and amino-acid age estimates of >35 000 B.P. The importance and likelihood of additional past ice shelves in the Canadian High Arctic is discussed.


1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 984-999 ◽  
Author(s):  
John England

Throughout the last glaciation, the Innuitian Sea, rather than glaciers, occupied many fiords and channels of the Queen Elizabeth Islands. Two alternative hypotheses, which constitute end members, are presented to account for the transgression of the Innuitian Sea between 18 and 8.8 ka, at which time it reached marine limit. Hypothesis A proposes that the last ice load was fully established by 18 ka and that it remained stable while sea level rose eustatically from approximately 60 m asl to marine limit by 8.8 ka. Hypothesis B proposes an advance of glaciers from present-day positions after 14 ka, when increased precipitation allowed rapid glacial loading to accompany the eustatic sea-level rise. By the early Holocene (when glaciers stood at the last ice limit) evidence suggests maximum warming and a shift to a negative mass balance.It is now recognized that the stable relative sea level at marine limit must record the balance between the rate of eustatic rise and the rate of uplift due to glacial unloading (thinning) between 8.8 and 7.8 ka. The rate of glacial unloading during this interval was low, approximately 1 m/100 years. Although the sea first penetrated inside the last ice limit by 8 ka, the first observed emergence was delayed until after 7.8 ka. By 7.6 ka many of the largest outlet glaciers from the Agassiz Ice Cap had retreated to positions equivalent to, or upvalley from, present-day margins. Nonetheless, between 7.8 and 7.2 ka, emergence progressed slowly (2 m/100 years), indicating that the large outlet glaciers retreated by calving, causing little change in the ice load. After 7.2 ka emergence was rapid, indicating that the regional glacial unloading was also rapid.It is proposed that the late deglaciation (Holocene) of the High Arctic favoured substantial postglacial emergence because the countering effect of the eustatic rise was largely completed by this time. Isobases drawn on the limit of the Innuitian Sea (the 8 ka shoreline) show a plunging ridge aligned with the south shore of Greely Fiord. It parallels the structural trends, suggesting the possibility of a tectonic component to the postglacial uplift.It is apparent that the style of ice advance and retreat in the High Arctic was controlled by several factors in addition to climatic change. These factors include topography, glacier dynamics, fiord bathymetry, sea-ice stability, and eustatic sea level.


2003 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 297-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Becky Sjare ◽  
Ian Stirling ◽  
Cheryl Spencer

2021 ◽  
Vol 250 ◽  
pp. 118254
Author(s):  
Andy Vicente-Luis ◽  
Samantha Tremblay ◽  
Joelle Dionne ◽  
Rachel Y.-W. Chang ◽  
Pierre F. Fogal ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document