Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/220025
Title: Holocene glacial oscillations in the Tyroler Valley (NE Greenland)
Author: Garcia-Oteyza Cira, Julia
Oliva Franganillo, Marc
Palacios Estremera, David
Fernández-Fernández, José Manuel
Schimmelpfennig, Irene
Fernandes, Marcelo
Medialdea, Alicia
Giralt Romeu, Santiago
Jomelli, Vincent
Antoniades, Dermot
ASTER Team
Keywords: Oscil·lacions
Holocè
Períodes glacials
Raigs còsmics
Geomorfologia glacial
Grenlàndia
Glaceres
Oscillations
Holocene
Glacial epoch
Cosmic rays
Glacial landforms
Greenland
Glaciers
Issue Date: 20-Feb-2023
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Abstract: Although the spatiotemporal oscillations of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) during the last millennia have played a prominent role in global environmental changes, its glacial response to the natural variability still needs to be better constrained. Here, we focused on the reconstruction of the glacial behavior and deglaciation process along the Tyroler Valley (74 N, 22 E), within the Northeast Greenland National Park. This NW-SE valley connects with the GrIS via the Pasterze Glacier and divides two ice caps (A.P. Olsen Land and Payer Land), this last one feeding two piedmont glaciers (Copeland and Kløft glaciers). For this study, we combined the interpretation of the spatial pattern of geomorphological features and the chronological framework defined by a new dataset of 15 10Be cosmic-ray exposure (CRE) ages from glacially polished bedrock surfaces and moraine boulders together with one optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) age of a glaciolacustrine deposit. CRE ages indicate that the deglaciation of the lowest parts of the valley and the exposure of the highest slopes took place during the Early Holocene, at ca. 10–8.5 ka (ka = thousand year [BP]). Furthermore, this ice thinning also favored the disconnection of the valley tributary glaciers. Samples from the moraines of the two tributary glaciers indicate that the deglaciation was not continuous, but it was interrupted by at least three phases of glacial advance during the Neoglacial cooling (before ca. 5.9 ka), and the Little Ice Age (LIA, 0.6, and 0.3 ka). The larger piedmont glacier (Copeland Glacier) occupied the valley floor during these major advances, damming the river and allowing the formation of a proglacial glacial lake upvalley, as confirmed by the OSL date of lacustrine sediments that yielded an age of 0.53 ± 0.06 ka. In short, our study provides new evidence of the relative stability of GrIS and the regional ice caps in the area, in which glacial fronts have been rather stable since their advances during the Neoglacial and the LIA.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.4633
It is part of: Land Degradation & Development, 2023, vol. 34, num.9, p. 2589-2606
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/220025
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.4633
ISSN: 1085-3278
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Geografia)

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