Evidence for an extensive ice shelf in northern Baffin Bay during the Last Glacial Maximum
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The glaciological significance of ice shelves is relatively well established for the stability of modern ice sheets of Antarctica. Past ice shelves of the Arctic, however, are poorly docu- mented while their role for the stability of former ice sheets remains mostly unknown. Here we present swath bathymetry data and seismostratigraphic profiles that reveal a large moraine system extending along the continental slope off Baffin Island, demonstrating that a 500-m thick ice shelf covered northern Baffin Bay during the last glacial episode. We suggest that this ice shelf had a profound impact on the stability of a series of major ice streams that drained the interior of the Laurentide, Innuitian and Greenland ice sheets. Climate warming and global sea-level rise in the early stage of deglaciation possibly contributed to a large-scale break-up of the ice shelf, which led to the destabilisation and reorganisation of tributary ice streams from these three ice sheets.
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Helmholtz Research Programs > CHANGING EARTH (2021-2027) > PT2:Ocean and Cryosphere in Climate > ST2.3: Sea Level Change