Journal of Quaternary Science Publication
Recent News
- Neoma Mass Spectrometer Commissioning
- Applied Geophysics Course EM-31, ERT & GPR Surveys
- IRC Research Ally Prize
- New instruments for high precision land surveying arrive at UCD
- Neoma MC-ICP-MS delivery
- Hook Head Peninsula Fieldtrip
- Next Generations Explorers Award
- Software Agreement with Baker Hughes
- Maeve Boland elected Fellow of the Geological Society of America
- New faculty - Dr Kara English
- New faculty – four Ad Astra Fellows
- Dr Laia Comas-Bru WCRP/GCOS Data Prize
- Mass extinction - learning from the past for the future
- Formation of platinum-group ore deposits & sub-volcanic intrusions
- UCD’s School of Earth Sciences collaboration with Irish-based NGO Self Help Africa (SHA)
- Swampy rainforests in Antarctica dated to the mid-Cretaceous
- Professor Frank McDermott Nature Publication
- The Blue Book Project
- 2019
- 2018
- 2017
- 2016
Refining the ice flow chronology and subglacial dynamics across the migrating Labrador Divide of the Laurentide Ice Sheet with age constraints on deglaciation
Dr Sam Kelley, UCD faculty, has co-authored a recent paper published in the Journal of Quaternary Science. Lead author on the paper is PhD Student, at the University of Waterloo, Jessey Rice. The project was run by Geological Survey Canada and the University of Waterloo.
Abstract
The Laurentide Ice Sheet was characterized by a dynamic polythermal base. However, important data and knowledge gaps have led to contrasting reconstructions in areas such as the Labrador Ice Divide. In this study, detailed fieldwork was conducted at the southeastern edge of a major landform boundary to resolve the relative ice flow chronology and constrain the evolution of the subglacial dynamics, including the migration and collapse of the Labrador Ice Divide. Surficial mapping and analysis of 94 outcrop‐scale ice flow indicators were used to develop a relative ice flow chronology. 10Be exposure ages were used with optical ages to confine the timing of deglaciation within the study area. Four phases of ice flow were identified. Flow 1 was a northeasterly ice flow preserved under non‐erosive subglacial conditions associated with the development of an ice divide. Flow 2 was a northwest ice flow, which we correlate to the Ungava Bay Ice Stream and led to a westward migration of the ice divide, preserving Flow 2 features and resulting in Flow 3's eastward‐trending indicators. Flow 4 is limited to sparse fine striations within and around the regional uplands. The new optical ages and 10Be exposure ages add to the regional geochronology dataset, which further constrains the timing of ice margin retreat in the area to around 8.0 ka. Copyright © 2019 The Authors.
The full paper can be read (opens in a new window)here.