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Ice-sheet variability around the North Atlantic Ocean during the last deglaciation

Author

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  • A. Marshall McCabe

    (School of Environmental Studies, University of Ulster)

  • Peter U. Clark

    (Oregon State University)

Abstract

Millennial-scale variability in the flux of ice-rafted detritus to North Atlantic sediments during the last glacial period has been interpreted to reflect a climate-forced increase in the discharge of icebergs from ice-sheet margins surrounding the northern North Atlantic Ocean1. But the relationship between ice-sheet variability and climate change is not clear, as both the sources of ice-rafted detritus and the ice-marginal processes are varied and complex2,3,4. Terrestrial records are helpful in unravelling this complexity because they can demonstrate the scale of ice-sheet oscillations, and whether the ice sheet (or sector) was advancing or retreating with respect to climate change. Here we constrain the age and anatomy of a prominent readvance of the British Ice Sheet in the northern Irish Sea region at ∼14 14C kyr BP(∼16.4 calendar kyr BP). The analysis indicates that the British Ice Sheet participated in an iceberg discharge episode known as Heinrich event 1. Comparison with other terrestrial and marine ice-sheet records suggests that the dynamic collapse of the Laurentide Ice Sheet beginning at 14.6–15.0 14C kyr BP1,4 (∼17.2–17.6 calendar kyr BP)5 initiated varied responses from other ice-sheet margins around the northern North Atlantic region. These observations support the argument that the release of icebergs and meltwater during Heinrich event 1 disrupted the North Atlantic thermohaline circulation6,7,8, leading to a delay or reversal of deglaciation of the Northern Hemisphere and at least as far south as 40° S for two to three thousand years5,9,10, suggesting a climate forcing and response similar to that of the ensuing Younger Dryas ‘cold snap’11,12.

Suggested Citation

  • A. Marshall McCabe & Peter U. Clark, 1998. "Ice-sheet variability around the North Atlantic Ocean during the last deglaciation," Nature, Nature, vol. 392(6674), pages 373-377, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:392:y:1998:i:6674:d:10.1038_32866
    DOI: 10.1038/32866
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    Cited by:

    1. Maureen McHenry & Paul Dunlop, 2016. "The subglacial imprint of the last Newfoundland Ice Sheet, Canada," Journal of Maps, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 12(3), pages 462-483, May.

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