Vulnerability of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet to iceberg calving during late quaternary rapid climate change events

We present the first high-resolution record of iceberg calving on the continental slope of Vancouver Island, British Columbia (MD02-2496, 48 degrees 58N, 127 degrees 02W, 1243 m water depth), through the last glacial from the Cordilleran Ice Sheet (CIS). These previously unknown ice-rafted debris (IRD) events representing significant retreat of the western margin of the CIS out of marine waters show little correspondence with local climate change. High-resolution radiocarbon dating indicates that the younger IRD events coincide with global radiocarbon age plateaus that allow direct correlation with distal climate records where the same plateaus have been identified. The coincidence of episodic shedding of IRD from the CIS with North Atlantic climate events (i. e., North Atlantic Deep Water shutdown, and Heinrich events) begs the question: What drove CIS destabilization? Forcing appears to be external to CIS dynamics perhaps resulting from either eustatic sea level rise or episodes of atmospheric warming over the North American continent.

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Hendy I. L., Cosma T. (2008). Vulnerability of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet to iceberg calving during late quaternary rapid climate change events. Paleoceanography. 23 (2 / PA2101). 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1029/2008PA001606, https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00237/34841/

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