LIVINGSTONE, Stephen J, LEWINGTON, Emma LM, CLARK, Chris D, STORRAR, Robert, SOLE, Andrew J, MCMARTIN, Isabelle, DEWALD, Nico and NG, Felix (2020). A quasi-annual record of time-transgressive esker formation: implications for ice-sheet reconstruction and subglacial hydrology. The Cryosphere, 14 (6), 1989-2004. [Article]
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Livingstone et al (2020).pdf - Published Version
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Abstract
We identify and map chains of esker beads (series of aligned mounds) up to
15 m high and on average ∼ 65 m wide in central Nunavut,
Canada, from the high-resolution (2 m) ArcticDEM. Based on the close
1 : 1 association with regularly spaced, sharp-crested ridges
interpreted as De Geer moraines, we interpret the esker beads to be
quasi-annual ice-marginal deposits formed time-transgressively at the mouth
of subglacial conduits during deglaciation. Esker beads therefore preserve a
high-resolution record of ice-margin retreat and subglacial hydrology. The
well-organised beaded esker network implies that subglacial channelised
drainage was relatively fixed in space and through time. Downstream esker
bead spacing constrains the typical pace of deglaciation in central Nunavut
between 8.1 and 6.8 cal kyr BP to 165–370 m yr−1, although with short
periods of more rapid retreat (> 400 m yr−1). Under our
time-transgressive interpretation, the lateral spacing of the observed
eskers provides a true measure of subglacial conduit spacing for testing
mathematical models of subglacial hydrology. Esker beads also record the
volume of sediment deposited from conduits in each melt season, thus
providing a minimum bound on annual sediment fluxes, which is in the range
of 103–104 m3 yr−1 in each 6–10 km wide subglacial
conduit catchment. We suggest that the prevalence of esker beads across this
predominantly marine-terminating sector of the Laurentide Ice Sheet is a
result of sediment fluxes that were unable to backfill conduits at a rate
faster than ice-margin retreat. Conversely, we hypothesise that esker ridges
form when sediment backfilling of the subglacial conduit outpaced retreat,
resulting in headward esker growth close to but behind the margin. The
implication, in accordance with recent modelling results, is that eskers in
general record a composite signature of ice-marginal drainage rather than a
temporal snapshot of ice-sheet-wide subglacial drainage.
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