scholarly journals Beaches in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Edward R T Butler

<p>Modern beaches in McMurdo Sound can be divided into 3 process regimes. Beaches on Ross Island (eastern McMurdo Sound) are characterised by marine processes with little ice modification. On ice-bound western McMurdo Sound, coastal orientation is of paramount importance. Ice thrust features are prominent on south facing beaches, which are open to the predominant wind direction and receive relatively small waves from the fetch restricted south. A greater degree of marine dominance is exhibited by beaches on north facing coasts where sea ice is blown offshore and the beaches are open to the larger storm waves from the eastern Ross Sea. The single most useful indicator of the relative importance of marine and ice processes on the beaches is the roundness of the beach material. Unlike the modern beaches, raised beach ridges at all sites comprise poorly sorted cobbles in a mixed sand and gravel matrix. These are inferred to be storm ridges. In contrast with the raised beaches, the modern beaches on the western side of the Sound have evidence of ice processes on them. This suggests that the modem beach has not experienced the same magnitude storms that produced the raised beaches. The size and frequency of the ridges is a product of the local wave climate. The number of raised beaches at any site is a useful indicator of the paleo-wave climate. More ridges occur in sheltered south facing locations, because they are more protected from open marine conditions, than on beaches in ice-free or north facing locations. When determining the marine limit of a site the most useful features are, low energy marine bedding features (such as flaser bedding) and boulder pavements. Based on inferred process information at the time of deposition, revised estimates of marine limits in McMurdo Sound and a new marine limit at Cape Barne are presented. Because the nature of the raised beaches has not been fully considered by previous authors sea level curves are inaccurate. The reconstruction of the retreat of the Ross Ice Shelf from marine limits in McMurdo Sound shows a three stage stepwise southward retreat of the Ross Ice Shelf. A breakout from somewhere north of Cape Roberts and south of Cape Ross back to Marble Point (on the western side of the Sound) while remaining north of Cape Bird (on the eastern side of the Sound), occurred sometime around 8,000 years ago. Another breakout cleared ice from Cape Bird to somewhere south of Cape Barne and south of Cape Bernacchi around 5,000 years ago. This differs with other authors work (Hall and Denton, 1999, Kellogg et al., 1996, Stuiver et al., 1981) by suggesting a considerably older date for the Ross Ice Sheet retreating from McMurdo Sound. The data presented here suggests that much of McMurdo Sound was ice free about 1,500 years before earlier estimates at about 6,500 years. The effect of the change in deglaciation timing is to reduce isostatic rebound rates. This suggests that there was less ice in McMurdo Sound during the Last Glacial Maximum.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Edward R T Butler

<p>Modern beaches in McMurdo Sound can be divided into 3 process regimes. Beaches on Ross Island (eastern McMurdo Sound) are characterised by marine processes with little ice modification. On ice-bound western McMurdo Sound, coastal orientation is of paramount importance. Ice thrust features are prominent on south facing beaches, which are open to the predominant wind direction and receive relatively small waves from the fetch restricted south. A greater degree of marine dominance is exhibited by beaches on north facing coasts where sea ice is blown offshore and the beaches are open to the larger storm waves from the eastern Ross Sea. The single most useful indicator of the relative importance of marine and ice processes on the beaches is the roundness of the beach material. Unlike the modern beaches, raised beach ridges at all sites comprise poorly sorted cobbles in a mixed sand and gravel matrix. These are inferred to be storm ridges. In contrast with the raised beaches, the modern beaches on the western side of the Sound have evidence of ice processes on them. This suggests that the modem beach has not experienced the same magnitude storms that produced the raised beaches. The size and frequency of the ridges is a product of the local wave climate. The number of raised beaches at any site is a useful indicator of the paleo-wave climate. More ridges occur in sheltered south facing locations, because they are more protected from open marine conditions, than on beaches in ice-free or north facing locations. When determining the marine limit of a site the most useful features are, low energy marine bedding features (such as flaser bedding) and boulder pavements. Based on inferred process information at the time of deposition, revised estimates of marine limits in McMurdo Sound and a new marine limit at Cape Barne are presented. Because the nature of the raised beaches has not been fully considered by previous authors sea level curves are inaccurate. The reconstruction of the retreat of the Ross Ice Shelf from marine limits in McMurdo Sound shows a three stage stepwise southward retreat of the Ross Ice Shelf. A breakout from somewhere north of Cape Roberts and south of Cape Ross back to Marble Point (on the western side of the Sound) while remaining north of Cape Bird (on the eastern side of the Sound), occurred sometime around 8,000 years ago. Another breakout cleared ice from Cape Bird to somewhere south of Cape Barne and south of Cape Bernacchi around 5,000 years ago. This differs with other authors work (Hall and Denton, 1999, Kellogg et al., 1996, Stuiver et al., 1981) by suggesting a considerably older date for the Ross Ice Sheet retreating from McMurdo Sound. The data presented here suggests that much of McMurdo Sound was ice free about 1,500 years before earlier estimates at about 6,500 years. The effect of the change in deglaciation timing is to reduce isostatic rebound rates. This suggests that there was less ice in McMurdo Sound during the Last Glacial Maximum.</p>


1989 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 85-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry Keys ◽  
Dennis Fowler

The shape, surface features, composition, and thickness of icebergs trapped annually in a 200 km long coastal strip of fast ice have been examined to determine their sources and movement. The thin western ice front of the Ross Ice Shelf seems to produce about 40% of the icebergs while local glaciers produce the remainder. The ice-shelf icebergs are carried west towards Ross Island then north up the western side of the Ross Sea. A small proportion of them gets trapped mainly by grounding on shallow areas of the sea floor which protrude across the regional long-shore currents.


1961 ◽  
Vol 3 (29) ◽  
pp. 859-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. P. Macdonald ◽  
T. Hatherton

Abstract The rate of movement of the Ross Ice Shelf has been determined at its terminal face to the south-east of Scott Base. An average rate of movement of 23 cm./day in a direction 270° True was determined for the period March 1957 to October 1958. The terminating face of the ice shelf in McMurdo Sound is only about 3 metres thick compared with a thickness of several hundred metres in the Ross Sea. Altimeter heights are used to demonstrate a thinning of the shelf which is attributed to melting from below.


1961 ◽  
Vol 3 (29) ◽  
pp. 859-866
Author(s):  
W. J. P. Macdonald ◽  
T. Hatherton

AbstractThe rate of movement of the Ross Ice Shelf has been determined at its terminal face to the south-east of Scott Base. An average rate of movement of 23 cm./day in a direction 270° True was determined for the period March 1957 to October 1958. The terminating face of the ice shelf in McMurdo Sound is only about 3 metres thick compared with a thickness of several hundred metres in the Ross Sea. Altimeter heights are used to demonstrate a thinning of the shelf which is attributed to melting from below.


1996 ◽  
Vol 42 (142) ◽  
pp. 486-500 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas B. Kellogg ◽  
Terry Hughes ◽  
Davida E. Kellogg

AbstractWe present new interpretations of deglaciation in McMurdo Sound and the western Ross Sea, with observationally based reconstructions of interactions between East and West Antarctic ice at the last glacial maximum (LGM), 16000, 12000, 8000 and 4000 BP. At the LGM, East Antarctic ice from Mulock Glacier split; one branch turned westward south of Ross Island but the other branch rounded Ross Island before flowing southwest into McMurdo Sound. This flow regime, constrained by an ice saddle north of Ross Island, is consistent with the reconstruction of Stuiver and others (1981a). After the LGM, grounding-line retreat was most rapid in areas with greatest water depth, especially along the Victoria Land coast. By 12000 BP, the ice-now regime in McMurdo Sound changed to through-flowing Mulock Glacier ice, with lesser contributions from Koettlitz, Blue and Ferrar Glaciers, because the former ice saddle north of Ross Island was replaced by a dome. The modern flew regime was established ∼4000 BP. Ice derived from high elevations on the Polar Plateau but now stranded on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, and the pattern of the Transantarctic Mountains erratics support our reconstructions of Mulock Glacier ice rounding Minna Bluff but with all ice from Skelton Glacier ablating south of the bluff. They are inconsistent with Drewry’s (1979) LGM reconstruction that includes Skelton Glacier ice in the McMurdo-Sound through-flow. Drewry’s (1979) model closely approximates our results for 12000-4000 BP. Ice-sheet modeling holds promise for determining whether deglaciation proceeded by grounding-line retreat of an ice sheet that was largely stagnant, because it never approached equilibrium flowline profiles after the Ross Ice Shelf grounded, or of a dynamic ice sheet with flowline profiles kept low by active ice streams that extended northward from present-day outlet glaciers after the Ross Ice Shelf grounded.


1979 ◽  
Vol 24 (90) ◽  
pp. 231-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Drewry

AbstractIf sea-level depression in the Ross Sea embayment were: (1) &lt; 120–130 m, or (2) &gt; 120–130 m but sustained for &lt; 104a, it is unlikely that the Ross Ice Shelf would have become fully grounded over the whole continental shelf during Wisconsin times. Sediments flooring the Ross Sea and recent estimates of sea-level lowering and post-glacial emergence yield little support for grounded ice but do provide some evidence for expanded ice-shelf conditions. A reconstruction is presented based on this premise. The model is compatible with glacial geologic results, especially those in the McMurdo Sound area.


1989 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 85-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry Keys ◽  
Dennis Fowler

The shape, surface features, composition, and thickness of icebergs trapped annually in a 200 km long coastal strip of fast ice have been examined to determine their sources and movement. The thin western ice front of the Ross Ice Shelf seems to produce about 40% of the icebergs while local glaciers produce the remainder. The ice-shelf icebergs are carried west towards Ross Island then north up the western side of the Ross Sea. A small proportion of them gets trapped mainly by grounding on shallow areas of the sea floor which protrude across the regional long-shore currents.


2003 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
BEN M. HUNT ◽  
KEVIN HOEFLING ◽  
CHI-HING C. CHENG

We obtained two years (1999–2001) of continuous, high resolution temperature and pressure data at two near-shore shallow water sites in McMurdo Sound, Ross Sea. Contrary to the long-held assumption of constant freezing conditions in the Sound, these records revealed dynamic temperature fluctuations and substantial warming during January to March reaching peak water temperatures of about −0.5°C. They also revealed that excursions above −1.1°C, the equilibrium melting point of ice in Antarctic notothenioid fish, totalled 8–21 days during the summer. Microscopic ice crystals are known to enter these fish but ice growth is arrested by antifreeze proteins. Prior to this study there were no known mechanisms of eliminating accumulated endogenous ice. The warm temperature excursions provide for the first time a possible physical mechanism, passive melting, for ice removal. The continuous records also showed a correlation between tidal pressures and cold temperature episodes, which suggests the influx of cold currents from under the Ross Ice Shelf may provide a mechanism for ice crystal nucleation as the source of the ice in McMurdo Sound fish. The accumulation of anchor ice on one logger caused it to float up which was recorded as a decrease in pressure. This is the first evidence for the time of onset of anchor ice formation in McMurdo Sound.


1979 ◽  
Vol 24 (90) ◽  
pp. 231-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Drewry

AbstractIf sea-level depression in the Ross Sea embayment were: (1) < 120–130 m, or (2) > 120–130 m but sustained for < 104 a, it is unlikely that the Ross Ice Shelf would have become fully grounded over the whole continental shelf during Wisconsin times. Sediments flooring the Ross Sea and recent estimates of sea-level lowering and post-glacial emergence yield little support for grounded ice but do provide some evidence for expanded ice-shelf conditions. A reconstruction is presented based on this premise. The model is compatible with glacial geologic results, especially those in the McMurdo Sound area.


1996 ◽  
Vol 42 (142) ◽  
pp. 486-500
Author(s):  
Thomas B. Kellogg ◽  
Terry Hughes ◽  
Davida E. Kellogg

AbstractWe present new interpretations of deglaciation in McMurdo Sound and the western Ross Sea, with observationally based reconstructions of interactions between East and West Antarctic ice at the last glacial maximum (LGM), 16000, 12000, 8000 and 4000 BP. At the LGM, East Antarctic ice from Mulock Glacier split; one branch turned westward south of Ross Island but the other branch rounded Ross Island before flowing southwest into McMurdo Sound. This flow regime, constrained by an ice saddle north of Ross Island, is consistent with the reconstruction of Stuiver and others (1981a). After the LGM, grounding-line retreat was most rapid in areas with greatest water depth, especially along the Victoria Land coast. By 12000 BP, the ice-now regime in McMurdo Sound changed to through-flowing Mulock Glacier ice, with lesser contributions from Koettlitz, Blue and Ferrar Glaciers, because the former ice saddle north of Ross Island was replaced by a dome. The modern flew regime was established ∼4000 BP. Ice derived from high elevations on the Polar Plateau but now stranded on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, and the pattern of the Transantarctic Mountains erratics support our reconstructions of Mulock Glacier ice rounding Minna Bluff but with all ice from Skelton Glacier ablating south of the bluff. They are inconsistent with Drewry’s (1979) LGM reconstruction that includes Skelton Glacier ice in the McMurdo-Sound through-flow. Drewry’s (1979) model closely approximates our results for 12000-4000 BP. Ice-sheet modeling holds promise for determining whether deglaciation proceeded by grounding-line retreat of an ice sheet that was largely stagnant, because it never approached equilibrium flowline profiles after the Ross Ice Shelf grounded, or of a dynamic ice sheet with flowline profiles kept low by active ice streams that extended northward from present-day outlet glaciers after the Ross Ice Shelf grounded.


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