Towards a more certain reconstruction of Gondwanaland

In the absence of identified magnetic anomalies in the southernmost Atlantic and Indian Oceans, palaeomagnetic data provide the most precise test of the initial relative positions of East and West Gondwanaland, with an uncertainty of about 10°. Two models are presented which lie within this uncertainty, but which have very different consequences for the initial position of the Antarctic Peninsula and the evolution of the Weddell Sea. Consideration of these models and their evolution shows that, in turn, a combination of mid-Jurassic palaeomagnetic data from the Peninsula and knowledge of Weddell Sea magnetic lineations should indicate the initial relative positions of East and West Gondwanaland.

Marine geophysical surveys over the Scotia Ridge show it to be composed of blocks mainly of continental origin. Major structures found on the blocks are in many cases truncated at block margins and their existence is also inconsistent with the present isolated situation of the blocks. The evidence suggests post-Upper Cretaceous fragmentation of a continuous continental area. Complementary marine geomagnetic studies over the deep water of the Scotia Sea have dated two areas as younger than 22 million years (Ma) and have indicated the direction of spreading in others. A model of present plate motions, based on the magnetic anomalies, explains the active volcanism of the South Sandwich Islands as being caused by consumption of Atlantic crust at the associated trench at a rate of 5.5 cm/year for the past 7 to 8 Ma at least. An Upper Tertiary episode of plate consumption at 5 cm/year at the South Shetland trench, suggested by the magnetic lineations, with a secondary slow extensional widening of Bransfield Strait is used to explain similarly the contemporaneous volcanism of the South Shetland Is. Making the reasonable assumption of a Tertiary formation of the undated parts of the Scotia Sea by spreading in the directions indicated by the magnetic lineations, a tentative reconstruction of the component blocks of the Scotia Ridge is made. The attempt is only partly successful in matching structural patterns across adjacent margins of reconstructed blocks, South Georgia being most obviously wrongly situated. It is suggested that the misfits result from minor errors in the initial assumptions and the modification of structures during fragmentation and drift. South Georgia may have formed on the Atlantic rather than the Pacific side of the compact continental region which is thought to have joined South America and west Antarctica for much of the Mesozoic at least. A Gondwanaland reconstruction is presented which is consistent with the Scotia Ridge reconstruction, in which the Antarctic Peninsula lies alongside the Caird Coast of east Antarctica. Upon break-up of Gondwanaland, the Antarctic Peninsula remained rigidly attached to South America, east Antarctica rotating clockwise to open the Weddell Sea, until early Tertiary times when the Peninsula transferred to east Antarctica which continued rotating clockwise to open the Scotia Sea.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frazer Christie ◽  
Toby Benham ◽  
Julian Dowdeswell

<p>The Antarctic Peninsula is one of the most rapidly warming regions on Earth. There, the recent destabilization of the Larsen A and B ice shelves has been directly attributed to this warming, in concert with anomalous changes in ocean circulation. Having rapidly accelerated and retreated following the demise of Larsen A and B, the inland glaciers once feeding these ice shelves now form a significant proportion of Antarctica’s total contribution to global sea-level rise, and have become an exemplar for the fate of the wider Antarctic Ice Sheet under a changing climate. Together with other indicators of glaciological instability observable from satellites, abrupt pre-collapse changes in ice shelf terminus position are believed to have presaged the imminent disintegration of Larsen A and B, which necessitates the need for routine, close observation of this sector in order to accurately forecast the future stability of the Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet. To date, however, detailed records of ice terminus position along this region of Antarctica only span the observational period c.1950 to 2008, despite several significant changes to the coastline over the last decade, including the calving of giant iceberg A-68a from Larsen C Ice Shelf in 2017.</p><p>Here, we present high-resolution, annual records of ice terminus change along the entire western Weddell Sea Sector, extending southwards from the former Larsen A Ice Shelf on the eastern Antarctic Peninsula to the periphery of Filchner Ice Shelf. Terminus positions were recovered primarily from Sentinel-1a/b, TerraSAR-X and ALOS-PALSAR SAR imagery acquired over the period 2009-2019, and were supplemented with Sentinel-2a/b, Landsat 7 ETM+ and Landsat 8 OLI optical imagery across regions of complex terrain.</p><p>Confounding Antarctic Ice Sheet-wide trends of increased glacial recession and mass loss over the long-term satellite era, we detect glaciological advance along 83% of the ice shelves fringing the eastern Antarctic Peninsula between 2009 and 2019. With the exception of SCAR Inlet, where the advance of its terminus position is attributable to long-lasting ice dynamical processes following the disintegration of Larsen B, this phenomenon lies in close agreement with recent observations of unchanged or arrested rates of ice flow and thinning along the coastline. Global climate reanalysis and satellite passive-microwave records reveal that this spatially homogenous advance can be attributed to an enhanced buttressing effect imparted on the eastern Antarctic Peninsula’s ice shelves, governed primarily by regional-scale increases in the delivery and concentration of sea ice proximal to the coastline.</p>


2006 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morag A. Hunter ◽  
David J. Cantrill ◽  
Michael J. Flowerdew

Dating Jurassic terrestrial floras in the Antarctic Peninsula has proved problematic and controversial. Here U–Pb series dating on detrital zircons from a conglomerate interbedded with fossil plant material provide a maximal depositional age of 144 ± 3 Ma for a presumed Jurassic flora. This is the first confirmed latest Jurassic-earliest Cretaceous flora from the Latady Basin, and represents some of the youngest sedimentation in this basin. The presence of terrestrial sedimentation at Cantrill Nunataks suggests emergence of the arc closer to the Latady Basin margin in the south compared to Larsen Basin in the north, probably as a result of the failure of the southern Weddell Sea to undergo rifting.


2005 ◽  
Vol 51 (175) ◽  
pp. 555-560 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian J. Fox ◽  
David G. Vaughan

AbstractIn recent decades, several ice shelves along the Antarctic Peninsula have diminished in size as a result of climate warming. Using aerial photographic, satellite and survey data we document a similar retreat of Jones Ice Shelf, which was another small ice shelf on the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. This ice shelf was roughly stable between 1947 and 1969, but in the early 1970s it began to retreat and had completely disappeared by early 2003. Jones Ice Shelf has two ice fronts only a few kilometres apart and its retreat provides a unique opportunity to examine how different ice fronts retreat when subjected to similar climate forcing. We mapped the retreat of both the east and west ice fronts of Jones Ice Shelf and found that, although individual episodes of retreat may be related to particularly warm summers, the overall progress of retreat of the two ice fronts has been rather different. This suggests that in this case the course of retreat is controlled by the geometry of the embayment and location of pinning points as well as climatic events.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joaquin Bastias ◽  
Richard Spikings ◽  
Alexey Ulianov ◽  
Teal Riley ◽  
Anne Grunow ◽  
...  

<p>We present new geochemical, isotopic and geochronological analyses of Late Triassic-Jurassic volcanic and intrusive rocks of the Antarctic Peninsula and Patagonia. Whole-rock geochemical data suggest that all of these igneous units formed in an active margin setting. This conclusion challenges the current paradigm that Jurassic magmatism of the Chon Aike province formed by the migration of the Karoo mantle plume from Africa towards the Pacific margin (Pankhurst et al., 2000). KDE analysis of 98 crystallisation ages reveals four main pulses of magmatism (V0: ~223-200 Ma; V1: ~188-178 Ma; V2: ~173-160 Ma; V3: ~157-145 Ma), which are approximately coincident with the episodic nature of the Chon Aike Magmatic Province reported by Pankhurst et al. (2000). Some magmatic units in eastern Patagonia are distal to the hypothetical paleo-trench relative to most active margin magmatism. These rocks have geochemical and geochronological characteristics that are indistinguishable from active margin-related rocks located ~200km from the palaeo-trench. Thus, we propose that a segment of the slab formed a flat-slab along southwestern Gondwana during the Late Triassic-Jurassic. This flat-slab is probably a temporal extension of the flat-slab episode suggested by Navarrete et al. (2019) for the Late Triassic (V0 episode) in eastern Patagonia. The progressive migration of the flat-slab magmatism to the southwestern margin of Patagonia suggest an evolution of its architecture during the Jurassic. Further, we propose that the flat-slab magmatism present in eastern Patagonia was triggered by slab failure, where foundering of the slab drove upwelling of hot mantle, forming a broad arc in an inland position in eastern Patagonia. Flat-slab subduction finished during the V3 episode (~157-145 Ma), with a continuation of an active margin along the western margin of the Antarctic Peninsula and Patagonia. Coeval extension in the South Atlantic and in western Patagonia lead to sea floor spreading, the formation of the Weddell Sea (~155-147 Ma; e.g. Konig & Jokat. 2006) and the Rocas Verdes Basin (~150 Ma; e.g. Calderon et al., 2007), respectively. The paleogeographic reconstructions juxtapose the northern Antarctic Peninsula and southern Patagonia during the Late Jurassic (e.g. Jokat et al., 2003), which suggest that the Rocas Verdes Basin and the Weddell Sea are oriented by a ~120° angle and potentially meet in southern Patagonia. This junction of sea-floor spreadings corresponds to the limits of the southern Rocas Verdes Basin with the eastern Weddell Sea oceanic lithosphere. We suggest that these rifts formed part of a triple junction, while the third rift arm should be located with a sub north-south orientation in the Antarctic Peninsula. Vast regions of the Antarctic Peninsula remain unexplored beneath the ice-cap, although we speculate that the third arm may correspond to the Eastern Palmer Land Shear Zone, which currently has a lateral extension of ~1500km (Vaughan & Storey, 2000). This new triple junction would be a Ridge-Ridge-Transform Fault intersection.</p><p>Calderon et al. 2007. JGS,164: 1011-1022.</p><p>Jokat et al. 2003. JGR, 108: 2428.</p><p>Konig & Jokat. 2006, 111: B12102.</p><p>Pankhurst et al. 2000. JP, 41(5): 605-625.</p><p>Navarrete et al. 2019. ESR, 194: 125-159.</p><p>Vaughan & Storey. 2000. JGS, 157: 1243-1256.</p>


1988 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 204-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Mulvaney ◽  
David A. Peel

In January 1986, a 133 m ice core, with an estimated age at the bottom of 300-350 years, was collected (using an electromechanical drill) on Dolleman Island (70° 35.2′S, 60°55.5′ W; 398 ma.s.l.; 10 m temperature −16.75°C). The site lies on the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula and has a continental-type climate dominated by perennial sea ice in the Weddell Sea. The core is being analysed for a range of chemical impurities, in order to assess their potential as indicators of past climate. High-resolution (10-15 samples a−1) continuous profiles of the anionic species Cl−1, NO3 − and SO4 2−, together with the cation Na+, have been measured on a section of the core from 26 to 71 m depth. The core has previously been dated between 0 and 32 m depth using the δ18O profile (Peel and others 1988). Lack of δ18O data for the section 32-71 m forced us to seek an alternative method of dating. Biogenic outgassing of sulphurous gases from the ocean and subsequent photochemical oxidation contribute an excess of sulphate over that derived from the marine aerosol. We show that excess sulphate, calculated as (concentrations in Eq. 1−1 and assuming that all measured Na+ is derived from sea salt), is highly seasonal in character, and annual horizons are well preserved over the whole of the core. This enabled us to determine the chronology to 71 m depth, and date the bottom of this section as 1844 ± 5 years. Cl− is derived mainly from sea salt. Its profile in the core is also seasonal in character, with peaks that tend to occur in late summer, reflecting the period of minimum sea-ice extent in the Weddell Sea, and therefore maximum source area for the uptake of sea salt. From instrumental meteorological records, Limbert (1974) showed that there were three extended periods of warm or cold weather in the Antarctic Peninsula between 1903 and 1944. During the two 4 year cold periods, when the summer break-up of sea ice in the Weddell Sea is likely to have been reduced, we found that the annual flux of Cl− to the Dolleman Island snow-pack was lower than the average. Conversely, the 3 year warm period showed a peak in the values of annual flux of Cl−. We therefore propose that Cl− can be used as a palaeoclimatic indicator for sea-ice extent. Extending our chloride data into the latter half of the nineteenth century (before the earliest continuous instrumental records for the Antarctic), we found three distinct peaks in the values of annual flux of Cl−. We suggest that the period 1850-60 was marked by a decrease in Weddell Sea ice extent (due perhaps to a warm period), followed by an extended period of increased sea ice. There were then two periods of much-reduced sea ice during (approximately) 1885-1890 and 1895-1900, with an intervening period of greatly increased ice coverage. These events are in good agreement with the warm and cold periods which Aristarain and others (1986) identified in the deuterium profile from James Ross Island.


2012 ◽  
Vol 160 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Rodríguez ◽  
C. Orejas ◽  
P. J. López-González ◽  
J. M. Gili

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