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Letters to Nature
Nature 392, 373-377 (26 March 1998) | doi:10.1038/32866; Received 15 August 1997; Accepted 19 January 1998
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Ice-sheet variability around the North Atlantic Ocean during the last deglaciation
A. Marshall McCabe1 & Peter U. Clark2
- School of Environmental Studies, University of Ulster, Coleraine, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland BT52 1SA, UK
- Department of Geosciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA
Correspondence to: A. Marshall McCabe1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to A.M.McC. (e-mail: Email: m.mccabe@ulst.break;ac.uk).
Abstract
Millennial-scale variability in the flux of ice-rafted detritus to North Atlantic sediments during the last glacial period has been interpreted to reflect a climate-forced increase in the discharge of icebergs from ice-sheet margins surrounding the northern North Atlantic Ocean1. But the relationship between ice-sheet variability and climate change is not clear, as both the sources of ice-rafted detritus and the ice-marginal processes are varied and complex2, 3, 4. Terrestrial records are helpful in unravelling this complexity because they can demonstrate the scale of ice-sheet oscillations, and whether the ice sheet (or sector) was advancing or retreating with respect to climate change. Here we constrain the age and anatomy of a prominent readvance of the British Ice Sheet in the northern Irish Sea region at
14 14C kyr BP(
16.4 calendar kyr BP). The analysis indicates that the British Ice Sheet participated in an iceberg discharge episode known as Heinrich event 1. Comparison with other terrestrial and marine ice-sheet records suggests that the dynamic collapse of the Laurentide Ice Sheet beginning at 14.6–15.0 14C kyr BP1,4 (
17.2–17.6 calendar kyr BP)5 initiated varied responses from other ice-sheet margins around the northern North Atlantic region. These observations support the argument that the release of icebergs and meltwater during Heinrich event 1 disrupted the North Atlantic thermohaline circulation6, 7, 8, leading to a delay or reversal of deglaciation of the Northern Hemisphere and at least as far south as 40° S for two to three thousand years5,9,10, suggesting a climate forcing and response similar to that of the ensuing Younger Dryas 'cold snap'11,12.
- School of Environmental Studies, University of Ulster, Coleraine, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland BT52 1SA, UK
- Department of Geosciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA
Correspondence to: A. Marshall McCabe1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to A.M.McC. (e-mail: Email: m.mccabe@ulst.break;ac.uk).
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