TY - JOUR
T1 - Late Wisconsinan glaciation of southern Eureka Sound
T2 - Evidence for extensive Innuitian ice in the Canadian High Arctic during the Last Glacial Maximum
AU - Ó Cofaigh, Colm
AU - England, John
AU - Zreda, Marek
N1 - Funding Information:
This paper is part of the senior author's Ph.D. thesis, written at the University of Alberta. The research was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Grant A6680 to J. E., the Canadian Circumpolar Institute (BAR Grant) and the Quaternary Research Association (Young Research Workers Award) to C. Ó C., and the National Science Foundation, Grant OPP-9530857 to M.Z.. Logistical support was provided by the Polar Continental Shelf Project, Natural Resources Canada. Radiocarbon dates were determined by the Geological Survey of Canada (Ottawa), IsoTrace Laboratory (University of Toronto), University of Arizona (Tucson), and BETA Analytic (Miami). We particularly thank Dr. Roger McNeely, GSC Radiocarbon Dating Laboratory, for assistance and discussion concerning radiocarbon dates. B. Tenbrüggen, C. Horvath and S. Gordon provided dedicated field assistance. Assistance by A. Podor during initial fieldwork is also gratefully acknowledged. Discussion and/or reviews of earlier drafts of the manuscript by M.J. Sharp (University of Alberta), D.S. Lemmen and J. Bednarski (Geological Survey of Canada, Calgary), M. Allard (Université Laval), N.W. Rutter and D. Vitt (University of Alberta), and D.A. Hodgson (Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa) are also gratefully acknowledged. Jonathan Tooby, Photographic Services, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, assisted with preparation of the photographs. Formal reviews by A.S. Dyke and W. Blake, Jr. improved the paper.
PY - 2000/9
Y1 - 2000/9
N2 - Southern Eureka Sound was originally proposed as the centre of an Innuitian Ice Sheet in the Canadian High Arctic at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) based largely on the pattern of Holocene emergence. This paper focuses on the glacial geological evidence for such an ice sheet in the region. Granite dispersal trains and ice-moulded bedrock record regional, westward flow of warm-based ice into Eureka Sound from SE Ellesmere Island. Regional ice was coalescent with local ice domes on inter-fiord peninsulas. Marine limit in the form of raised deltas, beaches and washing limits formed during deglaciation of the regional ice. Throughout southern Eureka Sound, marine limit dates ≤9.2 ka BP, indicating that ice commenced retreat during the early Holocene. Ice-divides were located along the highlands of central Ellesmere and Axel Heiberg islands, from which ice inundated Eureka Sound, flowing north and south along the channel. Regional radiocarbon dates on marine limit show that deglaciation occurred in two steps. Initial break-up and radial retreat of ice from Eureka Sound to the inner fiords was rapid and preceded stabilisation along adjacent coastlines and at fiord heads. Two-step deglaciation is also reflected in differences in glacial geomorphology between the inner and outer parts of many fiords. A prominent belt of fiord-head glaciogenic landforms, long proposed to mark the last glacial limit, is re-interpreted to record initial, stabilisation of ice margins due predominantly to bathymetric control. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd.
AB - Southern Eureka Sound was originally proposed as the centre of an Innuitian Ice Sheet in the Canadian High Arctic at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) based largely on the pattern of Holocene emergence. This paper focuses on the glacial geological evidence for such an ice sheet in the region. Granite dispersal trains and ice-moulded bedrock record regional, westward flow of warm-based ice into Eureka Sound from SE Ellesmere Island. Regional ice was coalescent with local ice domes on inter-fiord peninsulas. Marine limit in the form of raised deltas, beaches and washing limits formed during deglaciation of the regional ice. Throughout southern Eureka Sound, marine limit dates ≤9.2 ka BP, indicating that ice commenced retreat during the early Holocene. Ice-divides were located along the highlands of central Ellesmere and Axel Heiberg islands, from which ice inundated Eureka Sound, flowing north and south along the channel. Regional radiocarbon dates on marine limit show that deglaciation occurred in two steps. Initial break-up and radial retreat of ice from Eureka Sound to the inner fiords was rapid and preceded stabilisation along adjacent coastlines and at fiord heads. Two-step deglaciation is also reflected in differences in glacial geomorphology between the inner and outer parts of many fiords. A prominent belt of fiord-head glaciogenic landforms, long proposed to mark the last glacial limit, is re-interpreted to record initial, stabilisation of ice margins due predominantly to bathymetric control. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0277-3791(99)00104-3
DO - 10.1016/S0277-3791(99)00104-3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0033861411
SN - 0277-3791
VL - 19
SP - 1319
EP - 1341
JO - Quaternary Science Reviews
JF - Quaternary Science Reviews
IS - 13
ER -