Massive ground ice of glacial meltwater origin in raised marine-deltaic sediments, Fosheim Peninsula, high Arctic Canada

被引:2
作者
Roy, Cameron [1 ]
Campbell-Heaton, Kethra [2 ]
Lacelle, Denis [2 ]
Pollard, Wayne [1 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Montreal, PQ H3A 0B9, Canada
[2] Univ Ottawa, Dept Geog Environm & Geomat, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
Massive ground ice; Geochemistry; Water isotopes; Radiocarbon dating; Groundwater; Arctic; ELLESMERE-ISLAND; LATE PLEISTOCENE; LAST GLACIATION; CORED TERRAIN; CAP; DELTA-O-18; RECORD; SHEET; AMS; AGE;
D O I
10.1017/qua.2023.30
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
In the Canadian high Arctic, tabular massive ground ice is found extensively throughout the Eureka Sound Lowlands (ESL). This study evaluates the development of tabular massive ice in raised marine-deltaic sediments of the ESL based on new cryostratigraphic data from sites found between the coastline and the Holocene marine limit. At all sites, massive ice is found below laminated fine-grained marine sediments, and the upper contact between the ice and the overlying marine sediments is conformable and gradational. The concentration of major ions in the massive ice is orders of magnitude higher than expected for glacial ice, but Na/Cl molar ratios vary following elevation: the higher-elevation site has ratios similar to glacial ice, but sites at lower elevations have ratios closer to seawater. The & delta;O-18 values of the ice indicate that the main source of water is glacial meltwater but the & delta;D-& delta;O-18 regression slope values suggest that the ice formed in an open system while receiving an influx that had a substantially different isotopic signature than the initial reservoir. The development of massive ice in the marine-deltaic sediments involves glacial meltwater recharging an aquifer beneath the Holocene marine sediments with a contribution of 1-10% of seawater.
引用
收藏
页码:96 / 107
页数:12
相关论文
共 65 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2010, CANADIAN CLIMATE NOR
[2]   Ground ice melt in the high Arctic leads to greater ecological heterogeneity [J].
Becker, Michael S. ;
Davies, T. Jonathan ;
Pollard, Wayne H. .
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2016, 104 (01) :114-124
[3]   The last glaciation and sea level history of Fosheim peninsula, Ellesmere island, Canadian High Arctic [J].
Bell, T .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 1996, 33 (07) :1075-1086
[4]  
Bell T., 2000, ENV RESPONSE CLIMATE, P175
[5]   An estimate of ice wedge volume for a High Arctic polar desert environment, Fosheim Peninsula, Ellesmere Island [J].
Bernard-Grand'Maison, Claire ;
Pollard, Wayne .
CRYOSPHERE, 2018, 12 (11) :3589-3604
[6]   CONSOLIDATION OF SEDIMENTS BY GLACIERS - RELATIONS BETWEEN SEDIMENT GEOTECHNICS, SOFT-BED GLACIER DYNAMICS AND SUBGLACIAL GROUNDWATER-FLOW [J].
BOULTON, GS ;
DOBBIE, KE .
JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY, 1993, 39 (131) :26-44
[7]   Holocene ice wedge formation in the Eureka Sound Lowlands, high Arctic Canada [J].
Campbell-Heaton, Kethra ;
Lacelle, Denis ;
Fisher, David ;
Pollard, Wayne .
QUATERNARY RESEARCH, 2021, 102 :175-187
[8]   Persistent englacial drainage features in the Greenland Ice Sheet [J].
Catania, G. A. ;
Neumann, T. A. .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2010, 37
[9]   Warmer-wetter climate drives shift in δD-δ18O composition of precipitation across the Queen Elizabeth Islands, Arctic Canada [J].
Copland, Luke ;
Lacelle, Denis ;
Fisher, David ;
Delaney, Frances ;
Thomson, Laura ;
Main, Brittany ;
Burgess, David .
ARCTIC SCIENCE, 2021, 7 (01) :136-157
[10]   Origin, burial and preservation of late Pleistocene-age glacier ice in Arctic permafrost (Bylot Island, NU, Canada) [J].
Coulombe, Stephanie ;
Fortier, Daniel ;
Lacelle, Denis ;
Kanevskiy, Mikhail ;
Shur, Yuri .
CRYOSPHERE, 2019, 13 (01) :97-111