4.6 Article

Early-Middle Miocene (17-14 Ma) Antarctic ice dynamics reconstructed from the heavy mineral provenance in the AND-2A drill core, Ross Sea, Antarctica

Journal

GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
Volume 82-83, Issue -, Pages 38-50

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2011.11.003

Keywords

Antarctica; Miocene; ANDRILL; heavy mineral analysis; SEM-EDS; ice-sheet

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [0342484]
  2. US National Science Foundation
  3. NZ Foundation for Research Science and Technology
  4. Royal Society of New Zealand
  5. Italian Antarctic Research Programme
  6. German Research Foundation (DFG)
  7. Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres)
  8. Antarctica New Zealand
  9. Raytheon Polar Services

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The Miocene Climatic Optimum (17-15 Ma) and the rapid cooling of the Middle Miocene Climate Transition (15-13 Ma) together signal a major change in Earth's climate system. Here we examine the sediment provenance in the AND-2A drill core, located 10 km from the East Antarctic coastline, to significantly increase our understanding of Antarctic ice development, glacial erosion, and transport in the Ross embayment during this time. Heavy minerals are very diagnostic of source rock types and assemblages can be used to track changes in the areas of maximum erosion under the margin of an ice sheet. We used a combination of optical mineralogy and SEM-EDS analysis to characterize the heavy mineral fractions of diamictites and sandstones in the upper 650 m of AND-2A, which includes an expanded section dated between similar to 17 and 14 Ma. We find four diagnostic heavy mineral assemblages distributed in intervals throughout the core: I. (650-552 mbsf) elevated orthopyroxene, titanaugite, and carbonate contents; II. (552-308 mbsf) abundant diopside, pigeonite, and orthopyroxene, with sillimanite and kyanite; III. (308-250 mbsf) increasing contents of garnet and green hornblende; and IV. (250-20 mbsf) abundant green hornblende, titanaugite, green augite, and carbonate. Based on the heavy mineral analysis we demonstrate that (1) the ice sheet was grounded on the shelf at similar to 17.7-17.1 Ma, and it was eroding Cenozoic volcanic rocks to the south of the drillsite; (2) during the early part of the Miocene Climatic Optimum (similar to 17.1-15.5 Ma) the East Antarctic Ice Sheet retreated landward into upland regions of the Transantarctic Mountains, where it eroded dolerite sills and high-grade metamorphic rocks; (3) immediately prior to the Middle Miocene Climate Transition (15.5-14.3 Ma), the East Antarctic ice advanced and eroded granitic and low-medium grade metamorphic basement rocks in the coastal sections of the Transantarctic Mountains; and (4) following this initial phase of ice growth, the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and the East Antarctic Ice Sheet coalesced into a larger than modern (interglacial) Antarctic Ice Sheet prior to 14.3 Ma and eroded Cenozoic volcanic and low- to medium-grade metamorphic basement rocks to the south of the drillsite. Our results suggest that, although East Antarctica may have remained glaciated during the Miocene Climatic Optimum, ice extent was reduced to a configuration within the present interglacial extent, even during orbital-scale glacial maxima. Ice growth during the Middle Miocene Climate Transition commenced at ca. 15.5 Ma in the Ross Sea basin, which is slightly earlier than inferred from deep-sea stable isotope records, but in agreement with low-latitude sea-level reconstructions. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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