Thierens, M. et al. (2012): Ice-rafting from the British-Irish ice sheet since the earliest Pleistocene (2.6 million years ago); implications for long-term mid-latitudinal ice-sheet growth in the North Atlantic region

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 307
IODP 307 U1317
Identifier:
2012-090249
georefid

10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.12.020
doi

Creator:
Thierens, M.
University College Cork, Geology Department, Cork, Ireland
author

Pirlet, H.
British Geological Survey, United Kingdom
author

Colin, C.
Ghent University, Belgium
author

Latruwe, K.
Universite de Paris XI, France
author

Vanhaecke, F.
British Geological Survey, United Kingdom
author

Lee, J. R.
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Netherlands
author

Stuut, J. B.
University of Bremen, Germany
author

Titschack, J.
National Oceanography Centre-Southampton, United Kingdom
author

Huvenne, V. A. I.
author

Dorschel, B.
author

Wheeler, A. J.
author

Henriet, J. P.
author

Identification:
Ice-rafting from the British-Irish ice sheet since the earliest Pleistocene (2.6 million years ago); implications for long-term mid-latitudinal ice-sheet growth in the North Atlantic region
2012
In: Luethgens, Christopher (editor), Lee, Jonathan R. (editor), Boese, Margot (editor), Rose, James (editor), Quaternary glaciation history of northern Europe
Elsevier, International
44
229-240
The Plio-Pleistocene intensification of Northern Hemisphere continental ice-sheet development is known to have profoundly affected the global climate system. Evidence for early continental glaciation is preserved in sediments throughout the North Atlantic Ocean, where ice-rafted detritus (IRD) layers attest to the calving of sediment-loaded icebergs from circum-Atlantic ice sheets. So far, Early-Pleistocene IRD deposition has been attributed to the presence of high-latitudinal ice sheets, whereas the existence and extent of ice accumulation in more temperate, mid-latitudinal regions remains enigmatic. Here we present results from the multiproxy provenance analysis of a unique, Pleistocene-Holocene IRD sequence from the Irish NE Atlantic continental margin. There, the Challenger coral carbonate mound (IODP Expedition 307 site U1317) preserved an Early-Pleistocene record of 16 distinctive IRD events, deposited between ca 2.6 and 1.7 Ma. Strong and complex IRD signals are also identified during the mid-Pleistocene climate transition (ca 1.2 to 0.65 Ma) and throughout the Middle-Late Pleistocene interval. Radiogenic isotope source-fingerprinting, in combination with coarse lithic component analysis, indicates a dominant sediment source in the nearby British-Irish Isles, even for the oldest, Early-Pleistocene IRD deposits. Hence, our findings demonstrate, for the first time, repeated and substantial (i.e. marine-terminating) ice accumulation on the British-Irish Isles since the beginning of the Pleistocene. Contemporaneous expansion of both high- and mid-latitudinal ice sheets in the North Atlantic region is therefore implied at the onset of the Pleistocene. Moreover, it suggests the recurrent establishment of (climatically) favourable conditions for ice sheet inception, growth and instability in mid-latitudinal regions, even in the earliest stages of Northern Hemisphere glacial expansion and in an obliquity-driven climate system. Abstract Copyright (2012) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:51.2300
West:-11.4300East: -11.4300
South:51.2300

Quaternary geology; absolute age; Atlantic Ocean; British-Irish ice sheet; Cenozoic; chemostratigraphy; chronology; cores; detritus; Expedition 307; glacial geology; glacial transport; glaciation; ice rafting; ice sheets; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site U1317; isotopes; lithostratigraphy; marine sediments; Nd/Nd; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; O-18/O-16; oxygen; paleotemperature; Pleistocene; Porcupine Seabight; provenance; Quaternary; sediments; Sr/Sr; stable isotopes; transport;

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