TY - JOUR
T1 - Glacier and ocean variability in Ata Sund, west Greenland, since 1400 CE
AU - Ekblom Johansson, Fanny
AU - Wangner, David J.
AU - Andresen, Camilla S.
AU - Bakke, Jostein
AU - Støren, Eivind Nagel
AU - Schmidt, Sabine
AU - Vieli, Andreas
N1 - Funding Information:
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the VILLUM Foundation, which funded the project, ‘Past and future dynamics of the Greenland ice sheet: What is the ocean hiding?’ (grant no. 10100), and by the National Infrastructure EARTHLAB (NRC 226171) at the University of Bergen. We thank the crew – Eric, Otto and Pavia of the R/V Porsild – as well as the scientists – Kerim Nisanglociu, Rebecca Jackson, Nick Beaird and Fiamma Straneo – who participated in the ACDC 2014 summer school to retrieve the sediment cores. Thank you to Martin Miles for his valuable input on the interpretation, and to Florian Fiebig for language improvement and writing skill development.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2020.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - To improve knowledge of marine-terminating glaciers in western Greenland, marine sediment cores from the Ata Sund fjord system, hosting two outlet glaciers, Eqip Sermia and Kangilerngata Sermia, were investigated. The main objective was to reconstruct glacial activity and paleoceanographic conditions during the past 600 years. Ice-rafted debris (IRD) was quantified by wet-sieving sediment samples and by using a computed tomography scan. Variability in relative bottom water temperatures in the fjord was reconstructed using foraminiferal analysis. On the basis of this, three periods of distinct glacial regimes were identified: Period 1 (1380–1810 CE), which covers the culmination of the Little Ice Age (LIA) and is interpreted as having advanced glaciers with high IRD content. Period 2 (1810–1920 CE), the end of the LIA, which was characterised by a lowering of the glaciers’ calving flux in response to climate cooling. During Period 3 (1920–2014 CE), both glaciers retreated substantially to their present-day extent. The bottom water temperature started to decrease just before Period 2 and remained relatively low until just before the end of Period 3. This is interpreted as a local response to increased glacial meltwater input. Our study was compared with a study in Disko Bay, nearby Jakobshavn Glacier and the result shows that both of these Greenlandic marine-terminating glaciers are responding to large-scale climate change. However, the specific imprint on the glaciers and the different fjord waters in front of them result in contrasting glacial responses and sediment archives in their respective fjords.
AB - To improve knowledge of marine-terminating glaciers in western Greenland, marine sediment cores from the Ata Sund fjord system, hosting two outlet glaciers, Eqip Sermia and Kangilerngata Sermia, were investigated. The main objective was to reconstruct glacial activity and paleoceanographic conditions during the past 600 years. Ice-rafted debris (IRD) was quantified by wet-sieving sediment samples and by using a computed tomography scan. Variability in relative bottom water temperatures in the fjord was reconstructed using foraminiferal analysis. On the basis of this, three periods of distinct glacial regimes were identified: Period 1 (1380–1810 CE), which covers the culmination of the Little Ice Age (LIA) and is interpreted as having advanced glaciers with high IRD content. Period 2 (1810–1920 CE), the end of the LIA, which was characterised by a lowering of the glaciers’ calving flux in response to climate cooling. During Period 3 (1920–2014 CE), both glaciers retreated substantially to their present-day extent. The bottom water temperature started to decrease just before Period 2 and remained relatively low until just before the end of Period 3. This is interpreted as a local response to increased glacial meltwater input. Our study was compared with a study in Disko Bay, nearby Jakobshavn Glacier and the result shows that both of these Greenlandic marine-terminating glaciers are responding to large-scale climate change. However, the specific imprint on the glaciers and the different fjord waters in front of them result in contrasting glacial responses and sediment archives in their respective fjords.
KW - CT scanning
KW - Eqip Sermia
KW - foraminiferal analysis
KW - Greenland
KW - ice-rafted debris
KW - Kangilerngata Sermia
KW - Late Holocene
KW - Little Ice Age
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85089537939&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0959683620950431
DO - 10.1177/0959683620950431
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85089537939
SN - 0959-6836
VL - 30
SP - 1681
EP - 1693
JO - Holocene
JF - Holocene
IS - 12
ER -