4.7 Article

A chronology of Holocene and Little Ice Age glacier culminations of the Steingletscher, Central Alps, Switzerland, based on high-sensitivity beryllium-10 moraine dating

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 393, Issue -, Pages 220-230

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2014.02.046

Keywords

glacier fluctuations; Holocene \; Little Ice Age; Be-10 moraine dating; Swiss Alps; climate change

Funding

  1. CRONUS Cosmic-Ray Produced Nuclide Systematics on Earth
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [EAR-0345835]
  3. International Balzan Foundation
  4. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
  5. College de France
  6. Lamont Climate Center
  7. Comer Science and Education Foundation
  8. Hans-Sigrist Foundation

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The amplitude and timing of past glacier culminations are sensitive recorders of key climate events on a regional scale. Precisely dating young moraines using cosmogenic nuclides to investigate Holocene glacier chronologies has proven challenging, but progress in the high-sensitivity Be-10 technique has recently been shown to enable the precise dating of moraines as young as a few hundred years. In this study we use Be-10 moraine dating to reconstruct culminations of the Steingletscher, a small mountain glacier in the central Swiss Alps, throughout the Holocene. The outermost-recorded positions of Steingletscher most likely occurred in the Early Holocene and appear nearly synchronous with glacier culminations reported from other regions in the Alps. A Late-Holocene position corroborates the evidence for a significant glacier advance of similar extent to that of the Little Ice Age (LIA) similar to 3 kyr ago. Finally, fourteen boulders from different moraines yield 10Be ages between 580 and 140 years with analytical precisions mostly < 10%, dating Steingletscher advances during the LIA. Because these LIA Be-10 ages are in stratigraphic order, we tentatively distinguish four LIA glacier culminations: about 1470 CE, 1650 CE, 1750 CE and 1820 CE, which are in good agreement with existing independent records during the LIA in the Swiss Alps. These findings illustrate the high potential of the Be-10 moraine dating method to directly link paleo-glacier-chronologies to historical records and thus present-day glacier evolution. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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