4.5 Article

Pleistocene depositional environments and links to cryosphere-ocean interactions on the eastern Ross Sea continental slope, Antarctica (IODP Hole U1525A)

Journal

MARINE GEOLOGY
Volume 443, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.margeo.2021.106674

Keywords

Eastern Ross Sea; Sedimentary process; Trough-mouth fan; Turbidites; Pleistocene

Funding

  1. European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling
  2. Research Council of Norway
  3. Royal Society of New Zealand (New Zealand) TeAparangi Marsden Fund [18-VUW-089]
  4. MBIE (New Zealand) [ANTA1801]
  5. Natural Environment Research Council (United Kingdom) [NE/R018189/1]
  6. Italian Antarctic Research Program (Italy) [PNRA16_00016]
  7. US National Science Foundation (United States) [OCE-1326927, OPP2000995]
  8. NERC [NE/R018189/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study investigates the sedimentary records of the Ross Sea to understand the history and changes in interactions between past ice sheets and oceans. Through the analysis of different lithofacies characteristics, it reveals the evolution of ice sheets over the past approximately 2.4 million years. Sedimentation processes were influenced by turbidity currents and bottom currents differently during different glacial cycles, reflecting the oceanographic conditions and ice sheet dynamics at the time.
The repeated proximity of West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) ice to the eastern Ross Sea continental shelf break during past ice age cycles has been inferred to directly influence sedimentary processes occurring on the continental slope, such as turbidity current and debris flow activity; thus, the records of these processes can be used to study the past history of the WAIS. Ross Sea slope sediments may additionally provide an archive on the history and interplay of density-driven or geostrophic oceanic bottom currents with ice-sheet-driven depositional mechanisms. We investigate the upper 121 m of Hole U1525A, collected during International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 374 in 2018. Hole U1525A is located on the southwestern external levee of the Hillary Canyon (Ross Sea, Antarctica) and the depositional lobe of the nearby trough-mouth fan. Using core descriptions, grain size analysis, and physical properties datasets, we develop a lithofacies scheme that allows construction of a detailed depositional model and environmental history of past ice sheet-ocean interactions at the eastern Ross Sea continental shelf break/slope since similar to 2.4 Ma. The earliest Pleistocene interval (similar to 2.4- similar to 1.4 Ma) represents a hemipelagic environment dominated by ice-rafting and reworking/deposition by relatively persistent bottom current activity. Finely interlaminated silty muds with ice-rafted debris (IRD) layers are interpreted as contourites. Between similar to 1.4 and similar to 0.8 Ma, geostrophic bottom current activity was weaker and turbiditic processes more common, likely related to the increased proximity of grounded ice at the shelf edge. Silty, normally-graded laminations with sharp bases may be the result of flow-stripped turbidity currents overbanking the canyon levee during periods when ice was grounded at or proximal to the shelf edge. A sandy, IRD- and foraminifera-bearing interval dated to similar to 1.18 Ma potentially reflects warmer oceanographic conditions and a period of stronger Antarctic Slope Current flow. This may have enhanced upwelling of warm Circumpolar Deep Water onto the shelf, leading to large-scale glacial retreat at that time. The thickest interval of turbidite interlamination was deposited after similar to 1 Ma, following the onset of the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, interpreted as a time when most ice sheets grew and glacial periods were longer and more extreme. Sedimentation after similar to 0.8 Ma was dominated by glacigenic debris flow deposition, as the trough mouth fan that dominates the eastern Ross Sea continental slope prograded and expanded over the site. These findings will help to improve estimations of WAIS ice extent in future Ross Sea shelf-based modelling studies, and provide a basis for more detailed analysis of the inception and growth of the WAIS under distinct oceanographic conditions.

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