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Ocean temperature impact on ice shelf and glaciers around the Antarctic Peninsula during the Holocene

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Title
Ocean temperature impact on ice shelf and glaciers around the Antarctic Peninsula during the Holocene
Other Titles
홀로세 동안 수온 변화가 남극반도 주변의 빙붕과 빙하에 미친 영향
Authors
Etourneau, Johan
Willmott, Veronica
Kim, Jung-Hyun
Crosta, Xavier
Escutia, Carlota
Domack, Eugene
Damste, Jaap Sinninghe
Schouten, Stefan
Keywords
Antarctic PeninsulaOcean temperaturetheHolocene
Issue Date
2019
Citation
Etourneau, Johan, et al. 2019. Ocean temperature impact on ice shelf and glaciers around the Antarctic Peninsula during the Holocene. XIII International Symposium on Antarctic Earth Sciences. Incheon. 2019.07.22~2019.07.26.
Abstract
The Antarctic Peninsula is one of the most affected regions on Earth by the global warming. Both surface atmosphere and subsurface ocean temperatures have rapidly increased over the last decades and contributed to massive regional ice shelf and glacier regressions. However, we still need to further understand the relationship between changes in temperatures and ice cap, especially around the North of the Peninsula where the glaciers have the potential to raise sea level by nearly 70m. To this aim, we provide a new subsurface ocean temperature (SOT) (50-400m) record in the northern Antarctic Peninsula spanning the last 9,000 years before present (BP). We applied the TEX86L (TetraEther Index of tetraethers with 86 carbons) proxy for low temperatures to the relatively well-dated marine core Jumbo Piston Core (JPC) 33, retrieved in the southern Bransfield Strait. Our new Holocene SOT record reveals a strong +3ºC warming episode between 8.3 and 6.5 kyrs BP, before a cooling period preceding a second +2ºC warming phase during the last 4.0 kyrs BP. These two warming intervals are synchronous with pronounced regional ice shelf and glaciers retreat. Similar connections between increasing SOT and ice cap recession have also been reported along the Western and Eastern Antarctic Peninsula, thus confirming the predominant role of the SOT, mainly tied to the enhanced supply of relatively warm subsurface deep waters onto the ice shelf, on the ice cap extent over the last millennia.
URI
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/12647
Conference Name
XIII International Symposium on Antarctic Earth Sciences
Conference Place
Incheon
Conference Date
2019.07.22~2019.07.26
Type
Proceeding
Indexed
Pro(초록)국외
Appears in Collections  
2019-2019, Changes in environments and coastal geomorphology of Svalbard fjords, Arctic (19-19) / Nam, Seung-il (PN19090)
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