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During the most recent ice ages of the Quaternary (the last 2.6 million years), continental ice sheets covered much of Canada, the northern United States, northern Europe, and extended into the Arctic Ocean, with the Antarctic Ice Sheets growing to the continental shelf break (Figure 1) (Clark & Mix 2002). The growth and decay of these ice masses drove sea-level fluctuations on the order of 10's to over 100 m on the time scales of 100's to 10,000 years (Figure 2d) (Lambeck & Chappell 2001, Rohling et al. 2009). Periods where sea-level was >10 m below present are typically referred to as glacial periods; the intervening periods with sea level close to present day are called interglacial periods. The most rapid and dramatic periods of sea-level rise occurred during major deglaciations when most Northern Hemisphere ice sheets disappeared and the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets retreated to their present extents. Essentially, Earth switched from a glacial to an interglacial state. The frequency of deglaciations is approximately every 100,000 years for the last 500,000 years (Figure 2d). During at least one of the interglaciations, sea level was several meters higher than present, indicating retreat of at least one of the three remaining ice sheets to a smaller than present extent (Kopp et al. 2009, Rohling et al. 2009).
The fluctuations between glacial and interglacial states are driven by changes in Earth's orbit around the sun - called Milankovitch Cycles - that change the amount of incoming solar radiation called insolation (Figure 2a) (Hays et al. 1976, Berger & Loutre 1991). Because the major changes in Earth's ice masses occurred in the Northern Hemisphere where much of the Earth's land surface presently resides, it is hypothesized that high-northern latitude, or boreal, summer insolation was the most important forcing of the glacial-interglacial cycle. Ice sheets respond to both changes in precipitation (snow) and summer temperature with cold, wet conditions favoring ice growth and warm, dry conditions ice retreat. Ice sheets seem to mainly respond to changes summer temperature, which is what is affected by the Milankovitch cycles (e.g., Imbrie et al. 1993), with precipitation playing a lesser role in governing the growth and decay of ice.
Indeed, each of the major deglaciations depicted in Figure 2 correspond with an increase in boreal summer insolation. However, the relationship between sea level and boreal summer insolation is not one-to-one, and many increases in insolation do not have corresponding deglaciations. The lack of a direct correlation between insolation and sea level implies that Milankovitch Cycles may have additional influences on ocean circulation and atmospheric CO2 concentration, which amplify the effects of the changes in insolation, a process known as a positive feedback (Figures 2b & c) (Imbrie et al. 1993). Thus the Earth's climate system tends to force a persistent glacial state until a threshold is crossed-such as ice sheets extending too far south-and a deglaciation occurs in response to the next increase in boreal summer insolation (Imbrie et al. 1993, Clark et al. 1999). This article discusses the evidence for how ice sheets responded to these periods of past natural deglacial climate warming and contributed to sea-level rise, focusing on the last deglaciation and last interglaciation (Figure 2) for which sufficient data exist to discern the behavior of individual ice sheets.
Methods of Monitoring Ice-Sheet Behavior
The major late Quaternary ice sheets are the Laurentide (LIS), Cordilleran (CIS), Scandinavian (SIS), Barents-Kara (BKIS), Greenland (GIS) and East (EAIS) and West (WAIS) Antarctic Ice Sheets (Figure 1), which can be divided into predominately terrestrial and marine-based ice sheets. Terrestrial ice sheets, such as the LIS, CIS, SIS, GIS, and EAIS, have their margins and ice-base resting and terminating on land. That said, portions of these ice sheets, and the entire GIS and EAIS margins, did terminate in the ocean. Marine-based ice sheets like the BKIS and WAIS have much of their ice-base resting on ground below sea level, with their ice margin terminating in the ocean. This type of ice-sheet may be unstable because a rise in sea level, or thinning of the ice sheet, could trigger a destabilization where parts of the ice sheet could float, break up and rapidly retreat, which is often referred to as a collapse.
The combined behavior of global ice volume is recorded by fluctuations in sea level. The rise and fall of sea-level can be reconstructed by radiometrically dating corals who's habitat is near the sea surface and using their present elevations above or below current sea level as indicators of past sea-level fluctuations (Figure 2d) (e.g., Lambeck & Chappell 2001). Another method is to document changes in the salinity of evaporative basins only marginally connected to the open ocean, such as the Red Sea. A fall in sea level increases the influence of evaporation on the basin and the isotope ratio of the heavy 18O to light 16O increases in surface dwelling (planktonic) foraminifera shells (Figure 2d), because the lighter 16O is preferentially evaporated and not replenished by the reduced in low of ocean water (Siddall et al. 2003, Rohling et al. 2009). A third means of reconstructing sea level-usually applicable to time scales longer than discussed here-is the use of the 18O to 16O relationship in bottom dwelling (benthic) foraminifera (amoeboid animals) shells (e.g., Hays et al. 1976, Imbrie et al. 1993). Due to preferential evaporation of lighter 16O from the global ocean, this isotope accumulates in ice sheets and thus the ratio of 18O to 16O increases in the ocean during periods of ice growth. Similarly, the retreat of ice releases the sequestered 16O back to the ocean, reducing the 18O/16O ratio. This ratio is commonly expressed against a known standard of 18O/16O and denote using the symbol δ (i.e., δ18O).
The history of individual ice sheets can be determined directly by dating ice margin retreat and ice surface thinning, and indirectly from inferences of ice sheet runoff to the ocean. Radiocarbon (the radioactive isotope of C; 14C) dates on organic matter or calcite shells indicate the absence of ice, and with a significant number of ages bracketing glacial deposits, the advance and retreat of ice can be reconstructed (e.g., Landvik et al. 1998, Dyke 2004, Clark et al. 2009). Ice-sheet retreat can be directly dated using cosmogenic isotope ages of boulders deposited by the ice. Retreat exposes these boulders to the bombardment of cosmic radiation from outer space (fast protons, neutrons, and electrons) that impact upon elements in the rock's crystals, splitting or attaching to the atoms to make new isotopes (i.e., 3He, 10Be, 14C, 21Ne, 26Al, 36Cl) (Gosse & Phillips 2001). With a known production rate of these isotopes, one can calculate how long a boulder has been exposed to this bombardment by measuring the concentration of the isotope in the boulder surface. The melting of ice during retreat increases the discharge of 16O water to the ocean where the δ18O will decrease in planktonic foraminifera, allowing inference of greater ice retreat (Jones & Keigwin 1988). The runoff from ice-sheet melting will also transport more sediment to the ocean, which can be tracked by analyzing marine sediments for the abundance of terrestrially-derived elements such as Ti and Fe (Carlson et al. 2008b).
The retreat of ice sheets can be compared with ice core O and H isotope records of the ice (H2O). The δ18O of precipitation decreases as atmospheric temperatures cool because the colder air causes more of the 18O to be precipitated out of the cloud, leaving behind a lower 18O to 16O ratio that is recorded in the ice core. Warming causes the opposite effect. The 2H isotope called Deuterium behaves in a similar manner with the more common 1H isotope. Their ratio relative to a standard is denoted as δD. With a known linear relationship between δ18O and δD (e.g., Cuffey et al. 1995, Jouzel et al. 2007), ice core records can be converted into changes in temperature.
The Last Deglaciation
The last deglaciation spanned ~20-6 ka (ka=kilo annum, or a thousand years before present) with sea level rising 125-130 m (Figure 3g) reflecting the retreat of all of the Earth's ice sheets. Sea-level rise was not constant, however, with increases above its average rate of rise of ~1 cm yr-1 at 20-19, ~14.5 and 11-8 ka that resulted in many meters of sea-level rise in the span of centuries (Figure 3f), suggesting periods of rapid retreat of one or more of these ice sheets (Figure 1). The first increase in the rate of sea-level rise at 20-19 ka to ~1.4 cm yr-1 followed shortly after the initial rise in boreal summer insolation (Figure 3a) (Yokoyama et al. 2000, Clark et al. 2004). Terrestrial 14C and cosmogenic records and marine runoff records indicate that retreat had commenced for all Northern Hemisphere ice sheets by 20-19 ka in rapid response to rising boreal summer insolation and causing this acceleration in sea-level rise (Figures 3c-e) (Clark et al. 2009). However, terrestrial and marine ice sheets reacted differently to this initial increase in the incoming energy from the sun. The retreat of the terrestrial LIS slowed following this rise in sea level as indicated by its 14C-dated ice margin chronology (Figure 3e). In contrast, the marine BKIS rapidly retreated, or collapsed, as suggested by a significant decrease in δ18O (Jones & Keigwin 1988) with 14C dates indicating that much of its mass was gone before ~15 ka (Figure 3c) (Landvik et al. 1998).
The next deglacial increase in the rate of sea-level rise is called Meltwater Pulse (MWP) 1A (Fairbanks 1989) and occurred roughly coincident with warming of the North Atlantic region into what is termed the Bølling warm period ~14.6 ka (Figure 3b). During MWP-1A, sea level rose at the fastest rate of the last deglaciation, approaching ~2.8 cm yr-1. The LIS has long been assumed to be the main source of MWP-1A with additional contributions from the other Northern Hemisphere ice sheets (Fairbanks 1989, Peltier 2004, Tarasov & Peltier 2005). However, retreat rates of the LIS, CIS and SIS (Figure 1) as indicated by 14C and cosmogenic dates did not accelerate until after MWP-1A. Rather they responded gradually to Bølling warming (Figures 3d & e) with retreat slowing for the LIS and SIS during the subsequent cold period called the Younger Dryas (Figure 3b) (~12.9-11.7 ka) (Dyke 2004, Rinterknecht et al. 2006). Furthermore, δ18O records of meltwater discharge suggest <1/2 of MWP-1A came from the LIS and SIS (Clark et al. 1996, Carlson 2009, Obbink et al. 2010). Given that the BKIS was already well retracted (Figure 3c), an additional source of sea-level rise is required to explain the abruptness and magnitude of MWP-1A.
Several lines of evidence point towards contributions from the marine-based portions of the WAIS and EAIS. Ice margin 14C and cosmogenic dates indicate the onset of WAIS deglaciation 15-14 ka (Figure 4c) (Johnson et al. 2008, Clark et al. 2009, Bentley et al. 2010, Todd et al. 2010). An abrupt increase in ice core δD could record this rapid thinning as warming due to a drop in ice surface elevation (Price et al. 2007). The marine and potentially terrestrial portions of the EAIS also began retreat before ~14 ka (Mackintosh et al. 2011, White et al. 2011). This onset of WAIS and EAIS retreat occurred after an extended period of Antarctic warming (Figure 4b), implying that the marine portions of this ice-sheet responded abruptly, or non-linearly, to a gradual forcing.
The Last Interglaciation
The last interglaciation occurred ~128-116 ka (Shackleton et al. 2003) and followed a significantly more rapid deglaciation than the last deglaciation, likely forced by a greater increase in boreal summer insolation than the last deglaciation (Figure 2) (Ruddiman et al. 1980, Oppo et al. 1997, Siddall et al. 2006, Carlson, 2008). Boreal temperatures were 0-5 °C warmer than the late Holocene (CAPE 2006). Interestingly, ice-core records suggest significant warming over the EAIS upwards of 6°C despite a minimum in austral summer insolation (Figures 2c & 5c) (e.g., Jouzel et al. 2007, Sime et al. 2009). During this interglaciation, sea level rose to at least 4 m higher than present ~126-120 ka at rates approaching 1 cm yr-1 (Figures 2d & 5d) (Rohling et al. 2008, Kopp et al. 2009). The two most likely sources of the higher sea level are the GIS and WAIS, which would raise sea level ~7 and 3.3 to 5 m, respectively, upon complete deglaciation (Mercer 1978; Overpeck et al. 2006, Bamber et al. 2001, 2009).
Terrestrial and marine records indicate the GIS was diminished in size during the last interglaciation, although the magnitude of retreat is not well known and debated. Ice-core δ18O records suggest little change in the elevation of the ice surface relative to present in north Greenland, because the gradient in δ18O between different ice cores was roughly the same as at present (NGRIP 2004). However, significant thinning, but not complete deglaciation may have occurred in the south of Greenland because ice-core δ18O was much higher than at present, suggesting the ice surface was significantly lower than at present (NGRIP 2004, Willerslev et al. 2007). Alternatively, these same ice-core records have been interpreted to indicate almost complete deglaciation of southern Greenland (Otto-Bliesner et al. 2006, Alley et al. 2010) and significant retreat in northern Greenland (Koerner & Fisher 2002). Ice-sheet model simulations also estimate a wide range in GIS retreat, predicting sea-level rise contributions between ~1.6 and 5.5 m (Cuffey & Marshall 2000, Huybrechts 2002, Tarasov & Peltier 2003, Lhomme et al. 2005, Otto-Bliesner et al. 2006). Marine records of GIS runoff as inferred by increases in terrestrial sediment discharge to the ocean indicate a significantly longer period of elevated melting and greater retreat during the last interglaciation relative to the early Holocene (Stoner et al. 1995, Carlson et al. 2008b). A protracted period of elevated GIS runoff from ~128 to 120 ka suggests continued GIS retreat through this interglaciation with a minimum extent ~120 ka (Figure 5b). Pollen that drifted to the ocean from southern Greenland denotes greater vegetation development on Greenland relative to the Holocene, also supporting greater ice retreat (de Vernal & Hillaire-Marcel 2008).
Summary
The geologic record of ice-sheet retreat for the last deglaciation and last interglaciation permits several conclusions on the past behavior of ice sheets in a warming climate. Terrestrial ice sheets responded to climate warming rapidly, with no significant lag between initiation of warming and ice margin retreat. That said, their retreat has proven to be more gradual, or linear, suggesting that land-based ice is not necessarily prone to ice-sheet scale abrupt collapses even under climates warmer than present. In contrast, marine ice sheets have demonstrated non-linear responses to past climate warming, such as the significant lag between the onset of AIS retreat and Antarctic warming during the last deglaciation, but early collapse of the WAIS during the last interglacial. Despite these differing styles of behavior, both terrestrial and marine ice sheets contributed meters of sea-level rise on the time scale of centuries in response to past climate warming.
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