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Weathering fluxes and sediment provenance on the SW Scottish shelf during the last deglaciation

Arosio, Riccardo; Crocket, Kirsty C.; Nowell, Geoffrey M.; Louise Callard, S.; Howe, John A.; Benetti, Sara; Fabel, Derek; Moreton, Steve; Clark, Chris D.

Weathering fluxes and sediment provenance on the SW Scottish shelf during the last deglaciation Thumbnail


Authors

Riccardo Arosio

Kirsty C. Crocket

S. Louise Callard

John A. Howe

Sara Benetti

Derek Fabel

Steve Moreton

Chris D. Clark



Contributors

Louise Callard louise.callard@durham.ac.uk
Other

Abstract

The reconstruction of past ice sheet dynamics can shed a light on long-term ice stream activity, and in turn provide constraints on the response of modern ice sheets to climate change. The Hebrides Ice Stream (HIS) flowed across part of the western Scottish shelf to the shelf-break during the last glacial cycle and drained a large portion of the northern sector of the British Irish-Ice Sheet. To investigate the deglacial dynamics of the HIS following the Last Glacial Maximum, lead (Pb) isotope records were extracted from the FeMn oxyhydroxide and detrital fractions of recovered laminated glacimarine mud sequences to monitor the changing activity of HIS during its retreat. These provide timing and some source information of glacially weathered inputs to the marine environment. The FeMn oxyhydroxide fraction in the samples is dominated by allochthonous particles (pre-formed) and shows a marked decrease from radiogenic (≤ 20.05 206Pb/204Pb) at ~ 21 cal ka BP to less radiogenic Pb isotope compositions (~ 19.48) towards the Windermere Interstadial (15.4–13 ka). This decrease represents a reduction in the flux of subglacially-derived radiogenic Pb to the continental shelf is interpreted as being associated with the break-up of the ice-stream in western Scotland around that time. The Pb, Sr and Nd isotopic signatures of the detrital fraction indicate a preponderance of Moine-sourced fine sediments (originated from the NW Highlands) in the core locations from ~ 21 to 15 cal ka BP (Dimlington Stadial - Windermere Interstadial), most likely dictated by the orientation of ice flow, tidal and oceanic current directions and sediment delivery. In contrast, ice rafted debris in a ~ 21 cal ka BP old basal diamicton contains volcanic-derived material, suggesting different provenance for different grain sizes. The FeMn oxyhydroxide 208Pb/204Pb ratio shows an unusual inversion relative to the other Pb isotope ratios, and is attributed to the introduction of secondary weathering phases from a source with contrasting 208Pb/204Pb but similar 206Pb/204Pb and 207Pb/204Pb. In the detrital fraction, the inversions are constrained to periodic spikes, which may indicate an increased contribution from a high Th/U source, potentially the neighbouring Archaean amphibolitic Lewisian basement in the Outer Hebrides. This study demonstrates how geochemical investigation on continental shelves can be used to constrain the timing, activity and flow sources of palaeo-ice streams.

Citation

Arosio, R., Crocket, K. C., Nowell, G. M., Louise Callard, S., Howe, J. A., Benetti, S., …Clark, C. D. (2018). Weathering fluxes and sediment provenance on the SW Scottish shelf during the last deglaciation. Marine Geology, 402, 81-98. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2017.08.017

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 22, 2017
Online Publication Date Aug 31, 2017
Publication Date Aug 1, 2018
Deposit Date Sep 1, 2017
Publicly Available Date Mar 28, 2024
Journal Marine Geology
Print ISSN 0025-3227
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 402
Pages 81-98
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2017.08.017

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