4.0 Article

Surging glaciers in Scotland

Journal

SCOTTISH GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
Volume 137, Issue 1-4, Pages 1-40

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14702541.2021.1922738

Keywords

Glacial environments; palaeoenvironment; quaternary studies; polar environments

Categories

Funding

  1. St Andrews University Undergraduate Research Assistant Scheme

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Research suggests that during the Loch Lomond Stade, Scotland was likely the location of a surge cluster, providing a fresh perspective on the relationship between climate change and glacier evolution. Surge-type glaciers, unlike typical glaciers, exhibit cyclic advances and retreats that are decoupled from climate forcing, highlighting the importance of careful consideration when inferring climate changes and impacts.
Glacier surges are cyclic oscillations of velocity and mass resulting from internal dynamic instabilities. For surge-type glaciers, cycles of advance and retreat are decoupled from climate forcing, so it is important to consider the possibility that former glaciers may have been surge-type when making climatic inferences from their dimensions and chronologies. In this paper, climatic and glacier geometric data are used to show that Scotland was likely the location of a surge cluster during the Loch Lomond Stade (similar to 12.9-11.7 ka), with high probabilities of surging for outlets of the West Highland Icefield and the larger glaciers in the Inner Hebrides and Northern Highlands. Terrestrial and marine landforms consistent with surging occur in all of these areas, and it is proposed that surge-type glaciers existed on the Islands of Skye and Mull, in the Northern Highlands, and in a 'surging arc' along the western, southern and south-eastern margins of the West Highland Icefield. The possibility that surge-type glaciers were widespread in Scotland during the Loch Lomond Stade offers a fresh perspective on some long-standing issues, including the relationship between style of deglaciation and climate change, the climatic significance of glacial chronologies, palaeoclimatic reconstructions, and the interpretation of numerical model results.

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