Record Details

Ice Sheet Sources of Sea Level Rise and Freshwater Discharge During the Last Deglaciation

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Title Ice Sheet Sources of Sea Level Rise and Freshwater Discharge During the Last Deglaciation
Names Carlson, Anders E. (creator)
Clark, Peter U. (creator)
Date Issued 2012-12-22 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by American Geophysical Union and can be found at: http://www.agu.org/journals/rg/.
Abstract We review and synthesize the geologic record that
constrains the sources of sea level rise and freshwater discharge
to the global oceans associated with retreat of ice
sheets during the last deglaciation. The Last Glacial Maximum
(~26–19 ka) was terminated by a rapid 5–10 m sea
level rise at 19.0–19.5 ka, sourced largely from Northern
Hemisphere ice sheet retreat in response to high northern latitude
insolation forcing. Sea level rise of 8–20 m from ~19 to
14.5 ka can be attributed to continued retreat of the Laurentide
and Eurasian Ice Sheets, with an additional freshwater
forcing of uncertain amount delivered by Heinrich event 1.
The source of the abrupt acceleration in sea level rise at ~14.6 ka (meltwater pulse 1A, ~14–15 m) includes contributions
of 6.5–10 m from Northern Hemisphere ice sheets,
of which 2–7 m represents an excess contribution above that
derived from ongoing ice sheet retreat. Widespread retreat of
Antarctic ice sheets began at 14.0–15.0 ka, which, together
with geophysical modeling of far-field sea level records, suggests
an Antarctic contribution to this meltwater pulse as
well. The cause of the subsequent Younger Dryas cold event
can be attributed to eastward freshwater runoff from the Lake
Agassiz basin to the St. Lawrence estuary that agrees with
existing Lake Agassiz outlet radiocarbon dates. Much of the
early Holocene sea level rise can be explained by Laurentide
and Scandinavian Ice Sheet retreat, with collapse of Laurentide
ice over Hudson Bay and drainage of Lake Agassiz basin
runoff at ~8.4–8.2 ka to the Labrador Sea causing the 8.2 ka
event.
Genre Article
Identifier Carlson, A. E., and P. U. Clark (2012), Ice sheet sources of sea level rise and freshwater discharge during the last deglaciation, Reviews of Geophysics, 50, RG4007, doi:10.1029/2011RG000371.

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