Constraints on the timing and extent of deglacial grounding line retreat in West Antarctica
Constraints on the timing and extent of deglacial grounding line retreat in West Antarctica
Date
2023-04-26
Authors
Venturelli, Ryan A.
Boehman, Brenna
Davis, Christina
Hawkings, Jon R.
Johnston, Sarah E.
Gustafson, Chloe D.
Michaud, Alexander B.
Mosbeux, Cyrille
Siegfried, Matthew R.
Vick‐Majors, Trista J.
Galy, Valier
Spencer, Robert G. M.
Warny, Sophie
Christner, Brent C.
Fricker, Helen A.
Harwood, David M.
Leventer, Amy
Priscu, John C.
Rosenheim, Brad E.
Boehman, Brenna
Davis, Christina
Hawkings, Jon R.
Johnston, Sarah E.
Gustafson, Chloe D.
Michaud, Alexander B.
Mosbeux, Cyrille
Siegfried, Matthew R.
Vick‐Majors, Trista J.
Galy, Valier
Spencer, Robert G. M.
Warny, Sophie
Christner, Brent C.
Fricker, Helen A.
Harwood, David M.
Leventer, Amy
Priscu, John C.
Rosenheim, Brad E.
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DOI
10.1029/2022av000846
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Keywords
Subglacial lake
Antarctica
Radiocarbon
Deglaciation
Grounding line retreat
Carbon cycle
Antarctica
Radiocarbon
Deglaciation
Grounding line retreat
Carbon cycle
Abstract
Projections of Antarctica's contribution to future sea level rise are associated with significant uncertainty, in part because the observational record is too short to capture long‐term processes necessary to estimate ice mass changes over societally relevant timescales. Records of grounding line retreat from the geologic past offer an opportunity to extend our observations of these processes beyond the modern record and to gain a more comprehensive understanding of ice‐sheet change. Here, we present constraints on the timing and inland extent of deglacial grounding line retreat in the southern Ross Sea, Antarctica, obtained via direct sampling of a subglacial lake located 150 km inland from the modern grounding line and beneath >1 km of ice. Isotopic measurements of water and sediment from the lake enabled us to evaluate how the subglacial microbial community accessed radiocarbon‐bearing organic carbon for energy, as well as where it transferred carbon metabolically. Using radiocarbon as a natural tracer, we found that sedimentary organic carbon was microbially translocated to dissolved carbon pools in the subglacial hydrologic system during the 4.5‐year period of water accumulation prior to our sampling. This finding indicates that the grounding line along the Siple Coast of West Antarctica retreated more than 250 km inland during the mid‐Holocene (6.3 ± 1.0 ka), prior to re‐advancing to its modern position.
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© The Author(s), 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Venturelli, R., Boehman, B., Davis, C., Hawkings, J., Johnston, S., Gustafson, C., Michaud, A., Mosbeux, C., Siegfried, M., Vick‐Majors, T., Galy, V., Spencer, R., Warny, S., Christner, B., Fricker, H., Harwood, D., Leventer, A., Priscu, J., Rosenheim, B., & Team, S. Constraints on the timing and extent of deglacial grounding line retreat in West Antarctica. AGU Advances, 4(2), (2023): e2022AV000846, https://doi.org/10.1029/2022av000846.
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Venturelli, R., Boehman, B., Davis, C., Hawkings, J., Johnston, S., Gustafson, C., Michaud, A., Mosbeux, C., Siegfried, M., Vick‐Majors, T., Galy, V., Spencer, R., Warny, S., Christner, B., Fricker, H., Harwood, D., Leventer, A., Priscu, J., Rosenheim, B., & Team, S. (2023). Constraints on the timing and extent of deglacial grounding line retreat in West Antarctica. AGU Advances, 4(2), e2022AV000846.